Common two-banded seabream fish swim in the protected area of France's Porquerolles National Park on June 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Annika Hammerschlag,)

Oceans soaked up record amount of heat in 2025, study shows

After highest reading in modern history, report warns of an increase in tropical cyclones, rising sea levels and coral death

by · The Times of Israel

BREST, France — The world’s oceans absorbed a record amount of heat in 2025, an international team of scientists said Friday, further priming conditions for sea level rise, violent storms, and coral death.

The heat that has accumulated in the oceans last year increased by approximately 23 zettajoules — an amount equivalent to nearly four decades of global primary energy consumption.

This finding — published in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences — was the highest reading of any year since modern record keeping began in the early 1950s, researchers said.

To derive these calculations, more than 50 scientists from 31 research institutions used multiple sources, including a thousands-strong fleet of floating robots that track ocean changes to depths of 2,000 metres.

Peering into the depths, rather than fluctuations at the surface, provides a better indicator of how oceans are responding to “sustained pressure” from humanity’s emissions, study co-author Karina von Schuckmann said.

“The picture is clear: results for 2025 confirm that the ocean continues to warm,” von Schuckmann, an oceanographer from French research institute Mercator Ocean International, told AFP.

A rainbow stretches across the sky as a woman walks along the shore after swimming in the Mediterranean Sea, in Tel Aviv, Israel, Nov. 4, 2024. (AP/Francisco Seco)

Oceans are a key regulator of Earth’s climate because they soak up to 90 percent of the excess heat in the atmosphere caused by humanity’s release of greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide.

All that additional energy has a powerful knock-on effect. Warmer oceans increase moisture in the atmosphere, providing fuel for tropical cyclones and destructive rainfall.

Hotter seas also directly contribute to sea level rise — water expands as it warms — and make conditions unbearable for tropical reefs, whose corals perish during prolonged marine heatwaves.

“As long as the Earth continues to accumulate heat, ocean heat content will keep rising, sea levels will rise and new records will be set,” von Schuckmann said.

Humanity’s choice

Ocean warming is not uniform, with some areas warming faster than others.

The tropical oceans, the South Atlantic, the Mediterranean, the northern Indian Ocean, and the Southern Ocean were among the waters that absorbed record amounts of heat in 2025.

This occurred even as average sea surface temperatures decreased slightly in 2025, although it did remain the third-highest value ever measured.

This decrease is explained by the shift from a powerful, warming El Niño event in 2023–2024 to La Niña-type conditions generally associated with a temporary cooling of the ocean surface.

A huge wave crashes on the jetty of the harbor of Le Conquet, western France on January 8, 2026, as storm Goretti approaches France’s northern coasts. (Fred Tanneau/ AFP)

In the long term, the rate of ocean warming is accelerating due to a sustained increase in greenhouse gas concentrations in the atmosphere caused mainly by burning fossil fuels.

As long as global warming is not addressed and the amount of heat trapped in the atmosphere continues to rise, oceans will keep breaking records, the researchers said.

“The greatest uncertainty in the climate system is no longer the physics, but the choices humanity makes,” said von Schuckmann.

“Rapid emission reductions can still limit future impacts and help safeguard a climate in which societies and ecosystems can thrive.”