Bad News, People: 2016 Was Officially the Warmest Year on Record

For the third year in a row, Earth has set a new record for its highest average temperature since 1880. And the evidence is everywhere.

We've done it again: For the third year in a row, we've pushed this  that we call home past its previous temperature record.

This morning, scientists from two government agenciesthe National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) since modern recordkeeping began in 1880. NOAA and NASA each maintain independent datasets of the Earths temperature record, and both agree that 2016 was nearly 1簞C (1.69簞F and 1.8簞F, respectively) warmer than 19th century baselines.

These datasets are all singing the same song even if theyre hitting different notes along the way, said Deke Arndt, the chief of monitoring at NOAAs National Centers for Environmental Information, at todays press conference. The pattern is very clear.

That pattern is Earths undeniable warming trend. Sixteen of the 17 hottest years on record have occurred since 2001a pattern that cant be chalked up to chance. Instead, scientists attribute global warming to greenhouse gases emitted from fossil fuel-powered plants that, since the Industrial Revolution, have built up in the atmosphere and trapped heat. A warmer atmosphere and ocean alter rainfall patterns and weather (which in turn alter the distribution of plants, animals, and other natural resources) while also melting sea ice and glaciers, causing sea level to rise.

Temperatures in 2015 and 2016 were boosted by a strong El Ni簽o, a natural phenomenon that releases energy and water vapor from the Pacific Ocean into the atmosphere and shifts weather patterns. But 2016s record temperatures cant be pinned on warming from El Ni簽o alone: It was really global warmth that we saw in 2016, even more so than what we observed in 2015, Arndt said. As evidence, he pointed to last year's , . Starting in October and lasting through the end of the year, Arctic sea ice  just as it should have been refreezing from the winters cold. The Arctic is more sensitive to changes in global temperature than any other area of the world, and could be a sign that were approaching dangerous levels of warming.

The Arctic ice loss in 2016 is among many warming signs that the Earths climate is changing in ways we can now see and feel. For Arctic birds, warmer air and water largely means shifts in food sources. Some fish species that are now available, while staple foods like Arctic cod are migrating north and to deeper water. Some birds benefit from these changes, while others fail to find food and starve.

Meanwhile, warm temperatures are killing forests that birds need. in British Columbia, in California, and  in the West are among the tree species declining as the climate warms. In earlier periods of climate change, before humans settled so much of North America, these trees would be able to migrate to other areas with more suitable temperatures. But today, for many species, theres nowhere for them to move; there are too many houses and roads to establish new forests.

And those are just the start of a long list of 2016s warming signs. More evidence: Last year, the Great Barrier Reef and other Pacific coral reefs suffered from ; coral bleaching is caused by warm ocean water, and , reefs are unable to recover. Australias Bramble Cay melomys was after its island home was washed over by rising seas. In America,  are trying to move out of harms way; meanwhile, hungry polar bearsthemselves climate refugees as their sea ice habitat melts.

Last year also saw the largest international effort to fight climate change: the signing and ratification of the Paris Treaty, which aims to keep global warming within a safe range. The new U.S. administration has vowed to pull out of the agreement and renege on its pledges to reduce carbon emissions. Theyd be keen to keep in mind that, in a battle between physics and politics, physics tends to win. And 2016s record-setting temperatures have shown, yet again, that global warming isnt letting up.