The world has been warming faster than expected. Scientists now think they know why
By Laura Paddison, CNN
(CNN) — Last year was the hottest on record, oceans boiled, glaciers melted at alarming rates, and it left scientists scrambling to understand exactly why.
They know the extraordinary heat was fueled by a number of factors, predominantly planet-heating pollution from burning fossil fuels and the natural climate pattern El NiƱo. Bļ»æut those alone did not explain the unusually rapid temperature rise.
Now a new study ļ»æpublished Thursday in the journal Science says it has identified the missing part of the puzzle: clouds.
To be more specific, the rapid surge in warming was supercharged by a dearth of low-lying clouds over the oceans, according to the research ā findings which may have alarming implications for future warming.
In simple terms, fewer bright, low clouds mean the planet āhas darkened,ā allowing it to absorb more sunlight, said Helge Goessling, a report author and climate physicist at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany.
This phenomenon is called āalbedoā and refers to the ability of surfaces to reflect the sunās energy back into space.
The Earthās albedo has been declining since the 1970s, according to the report, due in part to the melting of light-colored snow and sea ice, exposing darker land and water which absorb more of the sunās energy, heating up the planet.
Low clouds also feed into this effect as they reflect away sunlight.
The scientists scoured NASA satellite data, weather data and climate models and found the decline in low clouds reduced the planetās albedo to record lows last year. Areas including parts of the North Atlantic Ocean experienced a particularly significant fall, the study found.
Last year fits into a decade-long decline of low cloud cover, Goessling told CNN.
What the study canāt yet explain for certain is why this is happening. āThis is such a complex beast and so hard to disentangle,ā Goessling said.
He believes it is likely the result of a combination of factors. The first is a reduction in shipping pollution due to regulations aimed at reducing the industryās harmful sulfur emissions. While this has been a win for human health, this type of pollution was also helping cool the planet by brightening clouds.
Natural climate variabilities, including changing ocean patterns, may also have contributed. But Goessling points to a third, more alarming factor: global warming itself.
Low-level clouds tend to thrive in a cool and moist lower atmosphere. As the planetās surface heats up, this can cause them to thin or dissipate entirely, setting up a complicated feedback loop where low clouds are disappearing because of global warming, and their disappearance then drives further warming.
If this is happening, future warming projections may be underestimated and āwe should expect rather intense warming in the future,ā Goessling said.
Mark Zalinka, an atmospheric scientist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory who was not involved in the study, said āthe fact that clouds play a key role in the story makes sense, as they essentially act as Earthās sunscreen.ā
Small changes in cloud cover can ādrastically change Earthās albedo,ā he told CNN.
Tapio Schneider, a climate scientist at the California Institute of Technology, said the worrying implication of the research is if global warming is responsible for a substantial amount of cloud cover change, āwe may see stronger global warming than previously predicted.ā
Clouds may seem simple, even mundane, but they are endlessly complex and scientists remain far from unraveling how they behave. They are āone of the biggest headachesā in climate science, Goessling said.
But figuring out how clouds will respond to global warming is key, Zalkina said. āIt literally determines how much future warming is in store.ā
The-CNN-Wire
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