BUENOS AIRES — The year 2004, punctuated by
four powerful hurricanes in the Caribbean and deadly typhoons lashing Asia, was
the fourth-hottest on record, extending a trend since 1990 that has registered
the 10 warmest years, a U.N. weather agency said Wednesday.
The current year was also the most expensive for the insurance industry in
coping worldwide with hurricanes, typhoons and other weather-related natural
disasters, according to new figures released by U.N. environmental officials.
The release of the report by the World Meteorological Organization came as
environmental ministers from some 80 countries gathered in Buenos Aires for a
United Nations conference on climate change, looking at ways to cut down on
greenhouse gases that some say contribute heavily to Earth's warming.
Scientists say a sustained increase in temperature change is likely to continue
disrupting the global climate, increasing the intensity of storms, potentially
drying up farmlands and raising ocean levels, among other things.
Michel Jarraud, the World Meteorological Organization secretary-general, said
the warming and increased storm activity could not be attributed to any
particular cause, but was part of a global warming trend that was likely to
continue.
Scientists have reported that temperatures across the globe rose an average of 1
degree over the past century with the rate of change since 1976 at roughly three
times that over the past 100 years.
The World Meteorological Organization said it expects Earth's average surface
temperature to rise 0.8 degrees above the normal 57 degrees Fahrenheit in 2004,
adding this year to a recent pattern that included the four warmest years on
record, with the hottest being 1998.
The month of October also registered as the warmest October since accurate
readings began in 1861, said the agency, which is responsible for assembling
data from meteorologists and climatologists worldwide.
During the summer, heat waves in southern Europe pushed temperatures to
near-record highs in southern Spain, Portugal and Romania, where thermostats
peaked at 104 degrees while the rest of Europe sweltered through above-average
temperatures.
The extreme weather of 2004 extended to storms.
The Caribbean had four hurricanes that reached Category 4 or 5 status -- those
capable of causing extreme and catastrophic damage. It was only the fourth time
in recent history that so many were recorded. The hurricanes of 2004 caused more
than $43 billion in damages in the Caribbean and the United States.
The worst damage was on Haiti, where as many as 1,900 people died from flooding
and mudslides caused by Tropical Storm Jeanne in September.
Japan and the Philippines also saw increased extreme tropical weather, with
deadly typhoons lashing both islands. Japan registered a record number of
typhoons making landfall this year with 10, while back-to-back storms in the
Philippines killed at least 740 people in the wettest year for the globe since
2000, the U.N. agency said.
Statistics released at the climate change conference showed that natural
disasters across the world in the first 10 months of the year cost the insurance
industry just over $35 billion, up from $16 billion in 2003.
Munich Re, one of the world's biggest insurance companies, said the United
States tallied the highest losses at more than $26 billion, while small
developing nations such as the Caribbean islands of Grenada and Grand Cayman
were also hit hard.
Other parts of the world also witnessed extreme weather, with droughts occurring
in the western United States, parts of Africa, Afghanistan, Australia and India.
Jarraud, of the U.N. weather agency, said the droughts were part of what appears
to be a surge over the last decade.
The prolonged rising temperatures and deadly storms were matched by harsh
winters in other regions.
Peru, Chile, and southern Argentina were all hit with severe cold and snow
during June and July.
Jarraud said the high temperatures like those seen in parts of Europe this year
were expected to inch up in the coming years.
Citing recent studies by European climatologists, Jarraud said heat waves in
Europe "could over the next 50 years become four or five times as frequent
as they are now."
Source: Associated Press