The ocean has shielded us from the worst of climate change. Now it is running a fever | Karina Von Schuckmann
Nearly every indicator of climate change is flashing red. But we still hold the tools available to bring the planet back into balance The ocean is running a fever. In 2025, the number of days of marine heatwaves โ prolonged spells when the sea turns abnormally, dangerously warm
Nearly every indicator of climate change is flashing red. But we still hold the tools available to bring the planet back into balance
The ocean is running a fever. In 2025, the number of days of marine heatwaves โ prolonged spells when the sea turns abnormally, dangerously warm โ was more than triple what it was in the early 1990s.
These are not abstract statistics. A severe and persistent marine heatwave bleaches coral reefs, strips away the kelp forests that shelter young fish, empties fishing grounds and โ if occurring frequently โ can tip whole ecosystems past the point of recovery.
It scrambles the chemistry the ocean lives by its acidity, its oxygen, the carbon it trades with the air, and can feed fiercer weather on land. For the coastal communities whose food and livelihoods come from the sea, the harm is immediate and personal.
I have spent my career studying where the heat from climate change actually goes. The answer, overwhelmingly, is the sea. The ocean has absorbed more than 90% of the excess heat that human activity has trapped on Earth, quietly buffering those of us on land from the full force of warming. For decades, that made it our greatest and most uncomplaining ally. Ocean warming and more frequent and intense marine heatwaves are signs that the buffer is straining. The heat we have poured into the ocean is beginning to surface as harm.
More frequent and intense marine heatwaves are just one of many new warning lights in this yearโs Indicators of Global Climate Change (IGCC) report , the annual health check on the climate system compiled by more than 70 researchers from more than 50 institutions worldwide in the years between the next official UN assessment in 2028. But the climate system is changing in ways we can measure every year, and the single most revealing measurement is one most people have never heard of.
It is called the Earthโs energy imbalance , and it is the closest thing we have to a master gauge of climate change: the gap between the energy reaching us from the sun and the energy the planet manages to radiate back out to space. In a stable climate, the two are roughly equal. However, several things are now prising them apart. By far the largest is the greenhouse gases humans keep adding, which thicken the atmosphereโs insulating blanket and trap heat that would otherwise escape. But they are not the whole story.
As we clean up the dirty air pollution of the past, we are also losing the faint reflective haze it cast , letting more sunlight through. As the planet heats, it triggers feedback that amplify warming. Bright, reflective ice giving way to dark, heat-absorbing ocean, cloud changes that tend to leave the Earth absorbing more energy than before and warming soils and waters releasing greenhouse gases of their own. Together, greenhouse gas emissions and this feedback are tipping the scales. Far less energy is now leaving than coming in, and the imbalance has more than doubled since the late 20th century.

