Met Office forecasts 2016 to be hottest year on record
Global average temperatures for next year are expected to hit a new high since records began in 1850, says a UK Met Office outlook.
At 0.84C above the 1961-90 average, the Met Office says 2016 “is likely to be at least as warm, if not warmer” than 2015.
§ Top spot
A few weeks ago, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) announced that 2015 is likely to be ranked as the hottest year in modern observations. Today, the Met Office says 2016 will likely knock it straight off top spot.
According to their annual outlook for the year ahead, 2016 is expected to be between 0.72C and 0.96C above the 1961-1990 average of 14.0C, with a most-likely estimate of 0.84C. You can see how this compares to the last 20 years in the chart below.
The likely record warming of both 2015 and 2016 is down to a combination of rising greenhouse gases and a “smaller” contribution from the strong El Niño underway in the Pacific, the Met Office says. El Niño events normally peak around the turn of the year, meaning an event tends to influence global temperatures for at least two years.
In a press release, Prof Adam Scaife, head of long-range prediction at the Met Office, said:
The Met Office says it doesn’t expect temperature records to be broken every year, but “the current situation shows how global warming can combine with smaller, natural fluctuations to push our climate to levels of warmth which are unprecedented in the data records”.
In response to the new Met Office forecast, Dr Ed Hawkins, an associate professor at the University of Reading, told Carbon Brief:
You can see this in the chart below, which comes from the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment report and has been updated by Hawkins. The red hatched area indicates the “likely” global average temperature rise expected by the IPCC, and the green bars show how the Met Office’s forecasts for 2015 and 2016 compare.
§ Forecasts
The Met Office has been predicting global temperatures one year in advance since 1999. In January, Carbon Brief looked back at some of these forecasts and how they are made. The chart below shows that they tend to match well with the ups and downs of annual temperature.
On 17 December 2014, for example, the Met Office made its forecast for 2015:
According to a Met Office, data from January to October this year puts 2015 at 0.72C above the 1961-90 average – to within 0.1C either side of that figure.
This at the upper end of the temperature range put forward in their prediction last year, though 2015 hasn’t quite finished yet, so the final figure may well change again.
The Met Office also expects global average temperatures in 2015 to hit 1C of warming since pre-industrial times (1850-1900).