Since 2018, a group of researchers from around the world has crunched the numbers on how much heat the worldâs oceans are absorbing each year. In 2025, their measurements broke records once again, making this the eighth year in a row that the worldâs oceans have absorbed more heat than in the years before. The study, which was published Friday in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Science, found that the worldâs oceans absorbed an additional 23 zettajoulesâ worth of heat in 2025, the most in any year since modern measurements began in the 1960s. Thatâs significantly higher than the 16 additional zettajoules they absorbed in 2024. The research comes from a team of more than 50 scientists across the United States, Europe, and China. A joule is a common way to measure energy. A single joule is a relatively small unit of measurementâitâs about enough to power a tiny lightbulb for a second, or slightly heat a gram of water. But a zettajoule is one sextillion joules; numerically, the 23 zettajoules the oceans absorbed this year can be written out as 23,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. John Abraham, a professor of thermal science at the University of St. Thomas and one of the authors on the paper, says that he sometimes has trouble putting this number into contexts that laypeople understand. Abraham offers up a couple options. His favorite is comparing the energy stored in the ocean to the energy of atomic bombs: The 2025 warming, he says, is the energetic equivalent to 12 Hiroshima bombs exploding in the ocean. (Some other calculations heâs done include equating this number to the energy it would take to boil 2 billion Olympic swimming pools, or more than 200 times the electrical use of everyone on the planet.) âLast year was a bonkers, crazy warming yearâthatâs the technical term,â Abraham joked to me. âThe peer-reviewed scientific term is âbonkersâ.â The worldâs oceans are its largest heat sink, absorbing more than 90 percent of the excess warming that is trapped in the at...
First seen: 2026-01-11 12:57
Last seen: 2026-01-13 11:04