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Huge glacier melt and fast rising seas amid hottest eight years on record – WMO

The past eight years are on track to be the hottest on record – bringing ever more dramatic and deadly impacts of climate change, the UN has said.Sea level rise is accelerating, the melting of Europe’s Alpine glaciers shattered records and devastating floods, drought and heatwaves hit in 2022, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said.As the latest international climate talks, Cop27, kick off in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt,  the UN’s weather and climate body released its annual state of the global climate report with yet another warning that the target to limit temperature rises to 1.5C was ‘barely within reach’.Countries agreed under the Paris climate treaty in 2015 to curb warming to ‘well below’ 2C and pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, but a lack of action has led to warnings that the 1.5C goal is slipping away.UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres described the latest report as a ‘chronicle of climate chaos’ and called for governments at Cop27 to answer the planet’s ‘distress signal’ with ambitious, credible climate action.The global average temperature in 2022 is estimated to be about 1.15C above levels seen in the 1850-1900 period, the WMO said.That puts 2022 on track to be the fifth or sixth warmest year on record, in the face of a rare triple-dip La Nina weather phenomenon in the Pacific which has naturally cooled global temperatures for the past two years.But the WMO warned that did not mean there was a reversal in the warming trend.The eight years since 2015 are likely to be the eight warmest years on record, and the impacts of global warming are becoming more pronounced.Glacier melt records were shattered in the European Alps, with average loss of three to four metres of ice thickness throughout the mountain range – substantially more than the previous record year of 2003. We have such high levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere now that the lower 1.5C of the Paris Agreement is barely within reachIn Switzerland, 6% of the glace ice volume was lost between 2021 and 2022 and for the first time in history no snow lasted the summer, so there was no accumulation of fresh ice.Between 2001 and 2022, glacier ice in Switzerland has declined by more than a third.The report said a low snowpack at the end of winter, and repeated coverings of Saharan dust – which darkens the surface and encourages more melting – set the scene for unprecedented ice loss between May and September this year as a result of the heatwaves that hit Europe.The rate at which sea levels are rising has doubled since 1993, with the acceleration due to increasing ice melt, the WMO report said.Just since January 2020, sea levels have risen by nearly 10mm (0.4 inches) to a new record high this year.Ocean heat was at record levels in 2021, the last year assessed, while this year Arctic sea ice extent was below the long term average for most of the year, and Antarctic sea ice dropped to its lowest level on record in February.Below average rainfall for the past four years in East Africa has fuelled drought and a food crisis in the region, record breaking rain cause devastating flooding in Pakistan – and China and Europe, including the UK, were hit by record heatwaves and damaging drought and wildfires.And there was no let up in the greenhouse gases driving climate change, with the three main  pollutants, carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide reaching record levels in 2021 and monitoring shows they continued to rise in 2022, the WMO said.WMO secretary-general Petteri Taalas said: ‘The greater the warming, the worse the impacts.’We have such high levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere now that the lower 1.5C of the Paris Agreement is barely within reach.’He warned it was ‘already too late for many glaciers’ and melting would continue for hundreds if not thousands of years, with major implications for water security.Sea level rises would add up to half a metre over a century,  proving a long-term and major threat to many millions of coastal dwellers and low-lying states. We must answer the planet’s distress signal with action – ambitious, credible climate actionAntonio Guterres, UN secretary generalAnd he said that while, all too often, those least responsible for climate change suffer most, even ‘well-prepared societies this year have been ravaged by extremes’.Responding to the report, Mr Guterres said: ‘We must answer the planet’s distress signal with action – ambitious, credible climate action. Cop27 must be the place – and now must be the time.’Leading climate scientist Professor Sir Brian Hoskins, chair of the Grantham Institute at Imperial College London, said the report showed: ‘A year of punishing heatwaves and droughts and floods in many parts of the world, and record heat stored in the climate system.’The record rise in atmospheric methane, a strong greenhouse gas, and the accelerating rise in sea level are particularly concerning.  One detail sums it up: Switzerland has lost more than a third of its glacier volume since 2001.’How much more warning do they need before the countries of the world will move from talk and promises to real action?’

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