CLIMATE
CRISIS
Earth Just Had Its Hottest September Ever
Recorded, NOAA Says
Oct. 16,
2020 09:04AM ESTCLIMATE
Earth Just
Had Its Hottest September Ever Recorded, NOAA Says
By Kenny Stancil
https://www.ecowatch.com/earth-hottest-september-noaa-2648227038.html?rebelltitem=1#rebelltitem1
As the climate crisis fuels devastating wildfires
across the western United States and melts Arctic sea ice at an alarming rate,
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Wednesday that
Earth just experienced the hottest September on record and that 2020 is on pace
to be one of the three hottest years on the books.
According
to NOAA, "the 10 warmest Septembers have all occurred since 2005, with the
seven warmest Septembers occurring in the last seven years."
"We've broken the climate system," tweeted
meteorologist Eric Holthaus. "We are in a climate emergency."
NOAA found
that 2020 has a 65% chance of beating out 2016 as the warmest year on record, a
35% chance of being the second-warmest ever, and will almost certainly rank in
the top three.
Climate
scientists emphasized that this year's record-setting temperatures have been
accompanied by an unprecedented wave of extreme weather events. A report
published Tuesday by the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction
examined the "staggering" increase in climate-related disasters,
which doubled from 3,656 between 1980 and 1999 to 6,681 between 2000 and 2019,
as Common Dreams reported.
Researchers
at Yale found that eight weather-related disasters causing $1 billion or more
in damage occurred across the world in September alone, bringing the annual
total thus far to 35. There were 40 such events in both 2018 and 2019.
With 16
extreme weather events so far in 2020, the U.S. has already tied its record for
most billion-dollar weather disasters in a single year.
NOAA's
findings echo a European Union study published one week ago. As Common Dreams
reported, one of the EU climate scientists who contributed to the analysis
noted that the planet "will carry on warming if greenhouse gas emissions
continue at the rate they are at the moment."
"It is
baffling that we willingly and knowingly continue to sow the seeds of our own
destruction," the U.N. report stated, "despite the science and
evidence that we are turning our only home into an uninhabitable hell for
millions of people."


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