HomeTechnologyThe summer of 2023 was the hottest ever recorded

The summer of 2023 was the hottest ever recorded

The summer of 2023 was the hottest since global records were recorded in 1880, NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York announced this Thursday.

The months of June, July and August, considered meteorological summer in the northern hemisphere, were 0.23 degrees Celsius (ºC) Warmer than any other summer on NASA record. and 1.2ºC warmer than the average summer between 1951 and 1980.

NASA scientists concluded that In August alone the climate was 1.2ºC warmer than average.

NASA says this new record comes at a time when exceptional heat has devastated much of the world, with compounded by deadly wildfires in Canada and Hawaii and Hot flushes in South America, Japan, Europe and the United States, which simultaneously contributed to the appearance of heavy rains in Italy, Greece and Central Europe.

The record summer temperatures of 2023 aren’t just a series of numbers: They have dire real-world consequences. From sweltering temperatures in Arizona and across the country, to wildfires in Canada and extreme flooding in Europe and Asia, extreme weather is threatening lives and livelihoods around the world,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson.

For Bill Nelson, “the impacts of climate change are a threat to the planet and future generations.”

NASA assembles its temperature record, known as GISTEMP, from surface air temperature data acquired by tens of thousands of weather stations, as well as sea surface temperature data obtained from buoys and ship-mounted instruments. .

These raw data are analyzed using methods that take into account the variable spacing of temperature stations around the world and the effects of urban warming that can bias the calculations.

NASA climate scientist Josh Willis highlighted that unusually high sea surface temperatures, fueled in part by the return of El Niño, were largely responsible for this summer’s record heat.

Scientific observations and analyzes conducted over decades by NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and other international institutions have shown that this warming has been driven mainly by gas emissions Greenhouse effect of human origin.

At the same time, the natural phenomenon of El Niño in the Pacific inject additional heat into the global atmosphere and are often related to warmer years that there is a record.

“With background warming and marine heat waves that have been building for decades, this El Niño has made us break all records“said Willis, highlighting that “the heat waves that are occurring now are longer, hotter and more violent,” in addition to the fact that the atmosphere “can also retain more water and, when it is hot and humid, it is even more difficult for the human body to regulate its temperature.”

Several scientists estimate that the greatest impacts of El Niño could occur in February, March and April 2024.

Unfortunately, climate change is happening. The things we said would happen are happening. And it will get worse if we continue to emit carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into our atmosphere,” said Gavin Schmidt, climate scientist and director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies.

Source: Observadora

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