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Paris climate summit 2015
World

Decade-long ‘pause’ in global warming, touted by sceptics, is over: British climate experts

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A Spanish firefighter walks through smoke near Cadiz during a summer outbreak of forest fires that some experts linked to climate change. Photo: AFP

A decade-long hiatus in the acceleration of global temperature increases has come to an end, experts say.

Man-made global warming is set to produce exceptionally high average temperatures this year and next, boosted by natural weather phenomena such as El Nino, Britain’s top climate and weather body said in a report Monday.

“It looks very likely that globally 2014, 2015 and 2016 will all be amongst the very warmest years ever recorded,” Rowan Sutton of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science, which contributed to the report, told journalists.

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“This is not a fluke,” he said. “We are seeing the effects of energy steadily accumulating in the Earth’s oceans and atmosphere, caused by greenhouse gas emissions.”

The rate at which global temperatures are increasing is also on track to pick up in the coming years, ending a period of more than a decade in which the pace of warming worldwide had appeared to slow down, the report said.

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This “pause” has been seized upon by sceptics as evidence that climate change was driven more by natural cycles than human activity.

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