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Earth sizzled to a global heat record in June. And July is getting hotter, experts say

Children sit in dresses and cool themselves with handheld electric fans.
Children cool themselves as they rest near the Forbidden City on a hot day last month in Beijing. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said Thursday an already warming Earth steamed to its hottest June on record.
(Andy Wong / Associated Press)
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An already warming Earth steamed to its hottest June on record, smashing the old global mark by nearly a quarter of a degree, with oceans setting temperature records for the third straight month, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced Thursday.

June’s 61.79-degree global average was 1.89 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th century average, according to NOAA. Other weather monitoring systems, such as NASA, Berkeley Earth and Europe’s Copernicus, had already called last month the hottest June on record, but NOAA is the gold standard for record-keeping with data going back to 1850.

The increase over the last June record is “a considerably big jump” because usually global monthly records are so broad-based they often jump by hundredths, not quarters, of a degree, said NOAA climate scientist Ahira Sanchez-Lugo.

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“The recent record temperatures, as well as extreme fires, pollution and flooding we are seeing this year, are what we expect to see in a warmer climate,” said Cornell University climate scientist Natalie Mahowald. “We are just getting a small taste for the types of impacts that we expect to worsen under climate change.”

Vermonters are working to dry out homes and businesses damaged by this week’s historic flooding and keeping a wary eye on the horizon with more rain expected in the coming days.

July 15, 2023

Both land and ocean were the hottest recorded in any June. But the globe’s sea surface — which is 70% of Earth’s area — has set monthly high temperature records in April, May and June, and the North Atlantic has been off-the-charts warm since mid-March, scientists say. The Caribbean smashed previous records, as did the United Kingdom.

The first half of 2023 has been the third-hottest January through June on record, behind 2016 and 2020, according to NOAA.

NOAA says there’s a 20% chance that 2023 will be the hottest year on record, with next year more likely, but the chance of a record is growing and outside scientists such as Brown University’s Kim Cobb are predicting a “photo finish” with 2016 and 2020 for the hottest year on record. Berkeley Earth’s Robert Rohde said his group figures there’s an 80% chance that 2023 will end up the hottest year on record.

That’s because it’s probably only to get hotter. July is usually the hottest month of the year, and the record for July and the hottest month of any year is 62.08 degrees set in July 2019 and July 2021. Eleven of the first dozen days in July were hotter than ever on record, according to an unofficial and preliminary analysis by the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer. The Japanese Meteorological Agency and the World Meteorological Organization said the world has just gone through its hottest week on record.

NOAA recorded water temperatures around Florida of 98 degrees on Wednesday near the Everglades and 97 degrees on Tuesday near the Florida Keys. Some forecasters were predicting near world-record-level temperatures in Death Valley of around 130 degrees this weekend.

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NOAA global analysis chief Russ Vose said the record hot June is because of two main reasons: long-term warming caused by heat-trapping gases spewed by the burning of coal, oil and natural gas that’s then boosted by a natural El Niño, which warms parts of the Pacific and changes weather worldwide, adding extra heat to already rising global temperatures. He said it’s likely most of June’s warming is due to long-term human causes, because so far this new El Niño is still considered weak to moderate. It’s forecast to peak in the winter, which is why NOAA and other forecasters predict 2024 to be even hotter than this year.

Though El Niño and its cooling flip side, La Niña, “have a big impact on year-to-year temperatures, their effects are much smaller over the long run than human-caused warming,” said climate scientist Zeke Hausfather of Berkeley Earth and the tech company Stripe. “Back in 1998, the world had a super El Niño event with record global temperatures; today the temperatures of 1998 would be an unusually cool year. Human-driven climate change adds a permanent super El Niño worth of heat to the atmosphere every decade.”

Global and Antarctic sea ice levels were at record lows in June, NOAA also said.

“Until we stop burning fossil fuels, this will only get worse,” climate scientist Friederike Otto of Imperial College London said in an email.

“Heat records will keep getting broken, people and ecosystems are already in many cases beyond what they are able to deal with.”

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