(NOAA)
|
“In this case, first place is the worst place to be,” said NOAA Administrator Rick Spinrad, Ph.D. “July is typically the world’s warmest month of the year, but July 2021 outdid itself as the hottest July and month ever recorded. This new record adds to the disturbing and disruptive path that climate change has set for the globe.”
July 2021 by the numbers
-
Around the globe: the combined land and ocean-surface
temperature was 1.67 degrees F (0.93 of a degree C) above the 20th-century
average of 60.4 degrees F (15.8 degrees C), making it the hottest July since
records began 142 years ago.
It was 0.02 of a degree F (0.01 of a degree C) higher than the previous record set in July 2016, which was then tied in 2019 and 2020. - The Northern Hemisphere: the land-surface only temperature was the highest ever recorded for July, at an unprecedented 2.77 degrees F (1.54 degrees C) above average, surpassing the previous record set in 2012.
- Regional records: Asia had its hottest July on record, besting the previous record set in 2010; Europe had its second-hottest July on record—tying with July 2010 and trailing behind July 2018; and North America, South America, Africa and Oceania all had a top-10 warmest July.
Extreme heat and global climate change
With last month’s data, it remains very likely that 2021 will rank among the world’s 10-warmest years on record, according to NCEI’s Global Annual Temperature Rankings Outlook.
Extreme heat detailed in NOAA’s monthly NCEI reports is also a reflection of the long-term changes outlined in a major report released this week by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change offsite link.
“Scientists from across the globe delivered the most up-to-date assessment of the ways in which the climate is changing,” Spinrad said in a statement.
“It is a sobering IPCC report that finds that human influence is, unequivocally, causing climate change, and it confirms the impacts are widespread and rapidly intensifying.”
|
Other notable highlights from NOAA’s July global climate report
-
Sea ice coverage varied by hemisphere: The Arctic sea ice
coverage (extent) for July 2021 was the fourth-smallest for July in the
43-year record, according to analysis by the
National Snow and Ice Data Center
offsite link.
Only July 2012, 2019 and 2020 had a smaller sea ice extent. Antarctic sea ice extent was above average in July — the largest July sea ice extent since 2015 and the eighth highest on record.
-
The tropics were busier than average: In the Atlantic
basin, the season’s earliest fifth-named storm, Elsa, formed on July 1. The
Eastern North and Western Pacific basins each logged three named storms.
Overall, global tropical cyclone activity this year so far (through July) has been above-normal for the number of named storms.
- Assessing the Global Climate in July 2021
- NCEI’s Global Annual Temperature Rankings Outlook
- 2021 Year-to-Date Temperatures Versus Previous Years
- Global Annual Temperature Rankings Outlook
- Mean Monthly Temperature Records Across the Globe
- Monthly Temperature Anomalies Versus El Niño
- IPCC Sixth Assessment Report
No comments:
Post a Comment