Quote:While North Atlantic warming can occur with El Niño, the event observed in 2023 appears to have occurred before El Niño was strongly developed, and is likely to be only weakly connected.
We believe that variability in the North Atlantic and other regions is largely responsible for the surge in global mean temperatures in the middle of 2023, before the 2023 El Niño event had gathered strength.
The surge is mid-2023 in the North Atlantic appears to have been caused, in significant part, by unusually low levels of Saharan dust at that time. However, as discussed below, a reduction in man-made sulfur aerosols is likely also contributing to the persistent warmth in the North Atlantic.
The persistence of warming in the North Atlantic, which was not generally anticipated, may have contributed to the persistence of high global average temperatures in 2024 even after the El Niño had ended. Recent changes may indicate that North Atlantic is also cooling a bit, but the basin remains at temperatures that are warmer than ever observed prior to 2023.
Only trouble with the switch to low sulphur fuels warming the Atlantic is that the North Atlantic usually has cloud cover. However, the next decade should let us tease out the effect of the decrease in aerosols from the marine sector.
Quote:. . .a majority of ocean basins set new records in 2024, with the exception of the Arctic Ocean, South Pacific Ocean, and Southern Ocean.