2025年是又一个异常炎热的一年。
2025 Was Another Exceptionally Hot Year

原始链接: https://e360.yale.edu/digest/2025-second-hottest-year

2023年有望成为有记录以来第二热的一年,紧随2024年之后,延续着前所未有的全球变暖趋势。过去三年已超过工业化前水平1.5°C,突破了一个关键的国际气候目标。这种快速变暖已经超过了气候模型预测,引发了科学调查。 几个因素正在被研究:2022年洪加汤加-洪加哈派火山爆发(增加了水蒸气)、太阳输出增加、2023年厄尔尼诺事件以及来自航运和燃煤电厂等来源的二氧化硫排放量大幅下降(减少了阳光反射)。 虽然每个因素都促成了变暖,但没有单一因素能完全解释这种激增。最近的研究表明,这些因素的结合*可能*可以解释这种增长,但仍存在不确定性。科学家们现在正专注于确定这是否是暂时的波动,还是气候变化加速的迹象。

## 黑客新闻讨论:2025年又将是高温年 一篇关于2025年异常炎热的文章引发了黑客新闻的讨论,焦点集中在数据有效性和气候变化加速的感知上。一位用户分析了历史美国温度数据,排除了1973年之后安装的站点,发现趋势大致平稳——引发了关于较新站点可能因位于热源附近而产生的偏差的争论。 其他人反驳了这一分析,指出既定的气候科学已经*考虑在内*了城市热岛效应和数据校准。人们对该用户的方法论提出了担忧,特别是排除了50年的数据和操纵图表比例。 对话范围扩大到包括对地球工程(无论是人为的还是通过二氧化碳排放造成的)的讨论,气候数据收集工作减少的努力,以及对缺乏有意义行动的普遍的无奈感,尽管已经发出了数十年的警告。 许多评论员对加速变暖的持续出现感到沮丧,并认为情况的严重性被低估了。
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原文

This year will conclude as the second hottest on record, surpassed only by 2024. It continues a recent trend of exceptional, unexplained warming. The last three years have been, by a wide margin, the hottest ever recorded.

Each of the last three years has measured more than 1.5 degrees C warmer than preindustrial times, putting the world at least temporarily in breach of an international goal to limit warming below that level, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service. 

The recent jump in warming, which exceeded the predictions of climate models, has puzzled scientists. Experts have explored a range of potential factors, from a recent volcanic eruption in the South Pacific to a drop in sunlight-blocking pollution.

Drawing on recent research into these questions, climate scientist Zeke Hausfather looked at four potential drivers of the warming surge for a recent analysis, published in Carbon Brief.

First was the 2022 eruption of Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha‘apai, an underwater volcano in the South Pacific, which sent a massive plume of heat-trapping water vapor into the upper atmosphere. And second was the recent uptick in solar output. Though the timing aligns well with the recent spike in warming, Hausfather finds these factors can explain less than half of the jump in temperature.

A third potential factor was the formation in late 2023 of a powerful El Niño, when warm waters pooled in the eastern Pacific, driving up temperatures worldwide. But while El Niño may explain the exceptional warmth in 2024, Hausfather shows, it cannot account for the jump in temperatures in early 2023.

Lastly was the recent dramatic drop in emissions of sulfur dioxide. The pollutant, which issues from coal power plants, blocks sunlight, thus cooling the planet. Its decline has fueled warming. In the past 18 years, sulfur dioxide emissions have declined by 40 percent as countries, namely China, cleaned up pollution from burning coal. Then in 2020, a new international rule cut sulfur dioxide from cargo ships, leading to a steep drop in pollution from shipping.

Scientists have focused on shipping as an explanation for the sudden warming surge. While research has generally found that cuts to shipping pollution have only had a modest impact on temperatures, one study, from James Hansen, formerly the chief climate scientist at NASA, found that the drop in shipping pollution would explain nearly all of the recent, exceptional warming.

Hausfather says that, together, all four factors may explain the recent surge. But even if they can, he says, questions remain: Is the surge temporary, or is it a sign that warming is accelerating?

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