Chinstrap penguins in Antarctica, which at the weekend
broke 20C for the first time in its history.
Earth just had hottest January since records
began, data shows
Average global temperature 2.5F above
20th-century average
Antarctic has begun February with several
temperature spikes
Oliver
Milman
@olliemilman
Thu 13 Feb
2020 17.42 GMTLast modified on Thu 13 Feb 2020 20.20 GMT
Last month
was the hottest January on record over the world’s land and ocean surfaces,
with average temperatures exceeding anything in the 141 years of data held by
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The record
temperatures in January follow an exceptionally warm 2019, which has been
ranked as the second hottest year for the planet’s surface since reliable
measurements started. The past five years and the past decade are the hottest
in 150 years of record-keeping, an indication of the gathering pace of the
climate crisis.
According
to Noaa, the average global land and ocean surface temperature last month was
2.5F (or 1.14C) above the 20th-century average. This measurement marginally
surpassed the previous January record, set in 2016.
A pulse of
unusual warmth was felt across much of Russia, Scandinavia and eastern Canada,
where temperatures were an incredible 9F (5C) above average, or higher. The
Swedish town of Örebro reached 10.3C, its hottest January temperature since
1858, while Boston experienced its hottest ever January day, at 23C (74F).
Meanwhile,
the Antarctic has begun February with several temperature spikes. The southern
polar continent broke 20C (68F) for the first time in its history on 9
February, following another previous high of 18.3C just three days previously.
Scientists called the readings “incredible and abnormal”.
Noaa said
the four warmest Januaries on record have occurred since 2016, while the 10
warmest Januaries have taken place since 2002.
The world’s
governments agreed in 2015 to keep the global temperature increase to well
below 2C, compared with the pre-industrial era, in order to stave off
disastrous flooding, food insecurity, heatwaves and mass displacement of
people.
However,
planet-warming emissions from human activity are not showing any sign of
decline, let alone the deep cuts needed to meet the 2C goal and address the
climate crisis. According to scientists, the world must halve its emissions by
2030 to stand any chance of avoiding disastrous climate breakdown.
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