News

How rising sea temperatures are affecting Earth’s climate

Oceans are changing as global temperatures increase, a shift that could have huge consequences for everyone on Earth. But the story of this portion of the planet’s surface is also one of hope and potential, especially when it comes to climate change, according to scientists and environmental advocates.

These dual messages are the focus of this year’s World Oceans Day, an international holiday occurring every June 8.

Why We Wrote This

Oceans help keep temperatures on Earth balanced. They may also offer some natural solutions to climate change. Yet rising temperatures are affecting oceans’ ability to serve as a heat buffer.

“Most people see the ocean as that wet place they go in a boat,” says Tom Pickerell, a marine scientist who is the global director for the Ocean Program at the World Resources Institute. “But it’s key to our survival.”

The oceans are the planet’s temperature regulators. They absorb most of the heat that comes into our atmosphere from the sun and distribute that warmth through a system of conveyor belt-like currents. Yet warmer water and melting ice impact those finely tuned currents. 

Even as oceans bear the brunt of climate change, they also offer the venue for solutions – such as supporting ocean ecosystems like mangroves and seagrasses that absorb carbon.  

Oceans are changing as global temperatures increase, a shift that could have huge consequences for everyone on Earth. But the story of this portion of the planet’s surface is also one of hope and potential, especially when it comes to climate change, according to scientists and environmental advocates.

These dual messages are the focus of this year’s World Oceans Day, an international holiday occurring every June 8. First suggested by the Canadian government in 1992, the day has evolved into a global effort to get land-focused humans to pay more attention to the water that covers 70% of our planet. This year the theme is “catalyzing action for our ocean and climate” – an effort to explicitly link the issues of ocean health and climate change.

“Most people see the ocean as that wet place they go in a boat,” says Tom Pickerell, a marine scientist who is the global director for the Ocean Program at the World Resources Institute. “But it’s key to our survival.”

Why We Wrote This

Oceans help keep temperatures on Earth balanced. They may also offer some natural solutions to climate change. Yet rising temperatures are affecting oceans’ ability to serve as a heat buffer.

Humans have explored only a tiny fraction of the ocean. A regular saying among marine scientists is that we know more about the moon than we do about our own watery ecosystem. But we do know some key facts: The ocean is central to Earth’s climate system. And it’s changing as humans alter the atmosphere. 

How do the world’s oceans affect Earth’s climate?

The oceans are the planet’s temperature regulators. They not only absorb most of the heat that comes into our atmosphere from the sun, but also distribute that warmth around the globe through a system of conveyor belt-like currents. This keeps the equatorial regions of the world, which get a disproportionate amount of solar radiation, from being unbearably hot, and the northernmost and southernmost regions from being unbearably cold. (The United Kingdom, for instance, has a mild temperature despite its high latitude thanks, in large part, to the Gulf Stream.)   

Robert F. Bukaty/AP/File

Max Oliver moves a lobster to the banding table aboard his boat while fishing off Spruce Head, Maine, Aug. 31, 2021. America’s lobster fishing business dipped in catch that year, faced with challenges including a changing ocean environment.

“Life on Earth exists because of the ocean,” says Lisa Suatoni, deputy director of the oceans divisions for the Natural Resources Defense Council. “It moderates our climate so that every point on Earth is habitable.”

Around half of the world’s oxygen comes from the ocean (thanks largely to photosynthesizing phytoplankton). About one-sixth of the animal protein that humans consume comes from ocean animals. And this might seem obvious, but the oceans give us … water. Almost all of the world’s rain comes from evaporating ocean water. That atmospheric moisture gets carried around the globe by trade winds, forms rainstorms, falls on land, and supports the hydrological systems that in turn support us. 

Previous ArticleNext Article