July 21 clocked in at 17.09 degrees and was the hottest day on Earth since at least 1940, according to the preliminary data from the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.
Global average temperatures typically peak during the Northern Hemisphere summer, between late June and early August.
Sunday’s record came as many countries endure prolonged and brutal heatwaves. About 100 cities across the US are experiencing their hottest start to summer on record, and swaths of southern Europe have been grappling with triple-digit temperatures.
Despite being based on data from the mid-20th century, the temperature records represent the warmest period the planet has seen in at least 100,000 years, scientists have found from many millennia of climate data extracted from ice cores and coral reefs.
Global climate records are typically broken by tiny fractions of a degree, as was the case with this one: Sunday’s temperature was just 0.01 degrees above 2023’s record.
What’s jarring is the warmest global temperatures were significantly cooler by about 0.3 degrees before 2023.
“We are now in truly uncharted territory and as the climate keeps warming, we are bound to see new records being broken in future months and years,” said Carlo Buontempo, director of Copernicus.
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These recent records were “truly straggering”, Buontempo said.
Global temperatures fluctuate based on natural factors: seasons, large-scale climate patterns and solar activity — and on unnatural factors: the pollution from human activity, including the burning of fossil fuels, which is chiefly driving the planet’s temperature steadily upward.
Scientists pegged last year’s record to the coincidence of El Nino, a natural climate pattern in the Pacific ocean with a warming effect, and fossil fuel pollution, which is trapping heat in the Earth’s atmosphere.
This year’s record comes as El Nino is disappearing and transitioning to its cool La Nina phase, underscoring the significant influence of the human-caused climate crisis.
The sudden rise in global temperatures is linked to abnormal heat in large parts of Antarctica, according to the Copernicus analysis.
The rapid warming of this vast, icy continent is a trend that is alarming scientists given the region’s ability to drive catastrophic sea level rise.
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