19 January 2016, Carbon Brief, Heat absorbed by oceans has doubled since 1997. The ocean is taking up twice as much heat now as it was just two decades ago, relative to pre-industrial times. According to new research, a third of that heat – and rising – is finding its way into the deep ocean below 700m, temporarily slowing warming at Earth’s surface. That the oceans are warming isn’t a surprise to scientists – it’s what we would expect from rising greenhouse gases. The more surprising part is the speed at which it is taking place. The new study, published today in Nature Climate Change, says as much heat entered the oceans in the last 18 years as in the previous 130 years. The new findings add to a growing body of research on the unseen impact of human activity on the oceans and the role they play in moderating the temperature we feel on Earth’s surface, say scientists not involved in the study. A brief history The oceans take up more than 90% of the heat trapped by greenhouse gases. It follows, then, that we would look to the oceans in seeking the fingerprint of human-caused climate change. Read more here