In New Zealand we are just past the winter solstice at a time when we should be getting our coldest temperatures of the year.
These
are the OVERNIGHT temperatures here in Lower Hutt.
It got really warm
about 4 am and was 15 degrees inside and obviously 15 degrees
outside..
The
previous night it reached 17 DEGREES.
I am getting all sorts of reports of something similar on Facebook and email
An
article has just come out saying June saw the hottest temperatures on
record for the month on the planet.
June
was hottest ever recorded on Earth, European satellite agency
announces
Experts
say climate change contributed to record-breaking temperatures across
Europe
2
July, 2019
Last
month was the hottest June ever recorded, the EU‘s satellite agency
has announced.
Data
provided by the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S), implemented
by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts on behalf
of the EU, showed that the global average temperature for June 2019
was the highest on record for the month.
The
data showed European average temperatures were more than 2C above
normal and temperatures were 6-10C above normal over most of France,
Germany and northern Spain during the final days of the month,
according to C3S.
The
global average temperature was about 0.1C higher than during the
previous warmest June in 2016.
Experts
have said climate change made last week’s record-breaking European
heatwave at least five times as likely to happen, according to recent
analysis.
Rapid
assessment of average temperatures in France between 26-28 June
showed a “substantial” increase in the likelihood of the heatwave
happening as a result of human-caused global warming, experts at the
World Weather Attribution group said.
The
recent heatwave saw France record the hottest temperature in the
country’s history (45.9C) and major wildfires across Spain, where
temperatures exceeded 40C.
C3S
admitted it is difficult to directly link the heatwave to climate
change but noted that such extreme weather events are expected to
become more common due to global warming.
Jean-Noel
Thepaut, head of C3S, said: ”Although local temperatures may have
been lower or higher than those forecast, our data shows that the
temperatures over the southwestern region of Europe during the last
week of June were unusually high.
“Although
this was exceptional, we are likely to see more of these events in
the future due to climate change.”
Peter
Stott, an expert in analysing the role of climate change in extreme
weather at the Met Office, claimed that “a similarly extreme
heatwave 100 years ago would have likely been around 4C cooler”.
Spikes
in European average temperatures of more than 1C above normal have
occurred before, such as in 1917 and 1999, but C3S said the recent
heatwave was notable because the sudden increase came on top of a
general rise of around 1.5C in European temperature over the past 100
years.
In
response to the record-breaking heat, Professor Hannah Cloke, natural
hazards researcher at the University of Reading, said: “We knew
June was hot in Europe, but this study shows that temperature records
haven’t just been broken. They have been obliterated.
“This
is the hottest June on record in Europe by a country mile, and the
warmest June we have ever seen globally.
“Heatwaves
occur in any climate, but we know that heatwaves are becoming much
more likely due to climate change. The global climate just keeps
getting hotter, as greenhouse gases continue to build up, as
scientists have predicted for decades.”
However,
she added: “Rapid attempts to find links between climate change and
single extreme weather events are possible, but often come with many
caveats. We should be careful not to ignore these caveats when we
look at the conclusions of quick-turnaround attribution studies.”
*A
previous headline on this story suggested June was the hottest month
ever recorded. Instead, it was the hottest June ever recorded. The
headline and article have been amended to reflect this.
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