Science

UN assesses if Antarctica temperature reading is record high

The United Nations weather agency said Friday that an Argentine research base on the northern tip of Antarctica is reporting a temperature that, if confirmed, could be a record high for the icy continent.

Continent is among the fastest-warming areas on earth

Warming in part of Antarctic peninsula may have hit new record high

5 years ago
Duration 0:36
Research centre at the Esperanza base records temperature of 18.3 C.

The UN weather agency said Friday that an Argentine research base on the northern tip of Antarctica is reporting a temperature that, if confirmed, could be a record high for the icy continent.

World Meteorological Organization (WMO) spokesperson Clare Nullis, citing figures from Argentina's national weather service, said the Esperanza base recorded 18.3 C on Thursday — topping the former record of 17.5 C tallied in March 2015.

The WMO committee that draws on the agency's weather and climate archives is now expected to verify whether the reading would amount to a new record.

"Everything we have seen thus far indicates a likely legitimate record, but we will of course begin a formal evaluation of the record once we have full data from SMN and on the meteorological conditions surrounding the event," said WMO's weather and climate extremes rapporteur, Randal Cerveny, referring to the acronym for Argentina's weather service.

"The record appears to be likely associated [in the short term] with what we call a regional 'foehn' event over the area," Cerveny said, defining it as a rapid warming of air coming down a slope or mountain.

A glacier at Chiriguano Bay in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica, is seen last November. (Johan Ordonez/AFP via Getty Images)

WMO says the Antarctic Peninsula, on the continent's northwest tip near South America, is among the fastest-warming regions on Earth — at almost three degrees over the last half-century.

Some 87 per cent of glaciers along the west coast of the peninsula have retreated over that 50-year span, with most showing "an accelerated retreat" over the last 12 years, WMO said.

Although Antarctica remains a cold place, this data image illustrates warming across the continent. Red represents areas where temperatures, measured in Celsius per decade, have increased the most during the last 50 years, while dark blue represents areas with a lesser degree of warming. West Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula, the craggy finger of land jutting out from the continent, have experienced the most warming. (NASA/GSFC Scientific Visualization Studio)