Another climate scare: 2023 was the hottest year ever

'Climate change is the biggest challenge that humanity faces'...Read More

In the midst of winter, another telling reminder came with the latest global data analysis says the weather on earth is consistently getting hotter.

The World Meteorological Organization said the year 2023 was the hottest year since records have been kept. The average global temperature in 2023 was 1.46 degrees C (2.6 F) higher than the preindustrial level, between 1850 and 1900.

That makes last year the 10th consecutive year that temperatures have been at least 1 degree C (1.8 F) above preindustrial levels.

The year was warmer than the previous hottest year 2016 by 0.17 C (0.3 F).

The weather organization uses six leading international datasets from across the globe to monitor global temperatures, which reveal a new annual temperature average of 1.45°C set against the pre-industrial era (1850-1900). 

Every month between June and December set new records. July and August were the two hottest months ever recorded, WMO said.

The 1.5°C figure is the temperature limit set out clearly in the 2015 Paris Agreement on Climate Change but that refers to the long-term temperature increase averaged over decades, rather than an individual year like 2023.

“Climate change is the biggest challenge that humanity faces. It is affecting all of us, especially the most vulnerable,” said WMO Secretary-General Prof. Celeste Saulo, presenting the report’s findings. 

“We cannot afford to wait any longer. We are already taking action, but we have to do more, and we have to do it quickly.”

Toward that end, Prof. Saulo explained, drastic reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and accelerated transition to renewable energy sources are needed.

The WMO warned that as the cooling La Niña phenomenon was replaced with a warming El Niño midway through last year – which usually has the biggest impact on global temperatures after it peaks – 2024 could be even hotter. While El Niño events are naturally occurring and come and go from one year to the next, longer term climate change is escalating and this is unequivocally because of human activities”. 

Since the 1980s, each decade has been warmer than the previous one and the past nine years have been the warmest on record. The data drawn from the six datasets shows that the ten-year average temperature increase in 2014-2023 was at about 1.20°C. 

“Humanity’s actions are scorching the Earth. 2023 was a mere preview of the catastrophic future that awaits if we don’t act now. We must respond to record-breaking temperature rises with path-breaking action,” UN chief António Guterres said in response to the latest data.
 
“We can still avoid the worst of climate catastrophe. But only if we act now with the ambition required to limit the rise in global temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius and deliver climate justice,” he said in a statement.
 

Categories
Climate ChangeHeat WaveWeather

Iftikhar Ali is a veteran Pakistani journalist, former president of UN Correspondents Association, and a recipient of the Pride of Performance civil award
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