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Major temperature rise recorded in
Arctic this
year: German scientists
Sat Aug 28,2004
PARIS (AFP) -
German scientists probing global warming said they had
detected a major temperature rise this year in the
Arctic Ocean
and linked this to a progressive shrinking of the region's sea ice.
Temperatures recorded this year in the upper 500 metres (1,625
feet) of sea in the
Fram
Strait -- the gap between Greenland and the Norwegian island of Spitsbergen
-- were up to 0.6 C (1.08 F) higher than in 2003, they said in a press
release received here.
The rise was detectable to a water depth of 2,000 metres (6,500
feet), "representing an exceptionally strong signal by ocean standards," it
said.
The experts, from the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and
Marine Research in
Bremerhaven,
have been recording temperatures aboard a specialised vessel, Polarstern
(Pole Star), for the past six weeks.
The sampling has been taking place in the West Spitsbergen
Current, which carries warm water from the
Atlantic into
the Arctic Ocean.
The institute said water in the
Fram Strait has
been warming steadily since 1990 and over the past three years, satellite
images had documented "a clear recession" of sea ice edges, both in the
strait and the
Barents Sea.
The latest data "point towards a further warming tendency," the
institute said.
In June, a UN organisation announced that American scientists had
detected an "alarmingly rapid growth" this year in airborne concentrations
of carbon dioxide (CO2), the fossil-fuel pollutant blamed for global
warming.
CO2 levels recorded in March 2004 at
Hawaii measured
379 parts per million (ppm), an increase of three ppm over the previous
year.
By comparison, there had been an annual increase of only 1.8 ppm
over the past decade. Atmospheric concentrations of CO2 before the
Industrial Revolution were 280 ppm.
The June announcement was made at a conference on renewable
energies in Bonn by Joke Waller-Hunter, executive secretary of the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) -- the United Nations (news
-
web sites)' paramount environment accord.
CO2 is the most important of the six "greenhouse" gases blamed
for driving changes to the world's delicate climate system.
These gases hang like an invisible shroud in the atmosphere,
trapping the Sun's heat and inflicting what many scientists predict will be
serious changes to icecaps, glaciers and weather patterns.
In the Earth's distant past, climate change has occurred
naturally, by emissions of CO2 disgorged by volcanoes and other phenomena.
But the overwhelming majority of climate experts say CO2 levels
are rising fast today because of the unbridled burning of oil, gas and coal.
Opinions differ, though, as to how fast the effects will occur
and how bad they will be.
Copyright
© 2004
Agence France Presse. All rights
reserved. The information contained in the AFP News report may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior
written authority of Agence France Presse.
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