Huge
climate milestone falls as July 2016 becomes Earth's hottest month on
record
16
August, 2016
Earth
just had its hottest month yet, and the record-shattering warmth
shows no signs of stopping.
According
to NASA, global average surface temperatures during July were 0.84
degrees Celsius, or 1.51 degrees Fahrenheit, above average. This
beats all previous Julys, with July 2011 coming in second at 0.74
degrees Celsius above average.
SEE
ALSO: June
marks Earth's 14th-straight record warm month, catapults globe into
new climate regime
The
large anomaly seen during July 2016 means that the month was the
hottest on Earth since instrumental records began in 1880.
July
is typically the planet's hottest month of the year due to the fact
that the Northern Hemisphere has more land area than the Southern
Hemisphere, making Northern Hemisphere summer the warmest month.
July
is now the tenth month in a row to be the warmest such month on
record in NASA's database.
It
is now virtually certain that 2016 will beat 2015 for the dubious
distinction of the hottest year on record.
NASA
is not the only agency that tracks global temperatures, and its
methods differ slightly from the others.
If
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) also finds
that July was the hottest such month on record and hottest month
overall, it would mean that the past 15 months have each set records
— an unprecedented feat in its database.
Seasonal
cycle of temperature anomalies showing July 2016 as the hottest
month-to-date. IMAGE:
NASA GISS VIA GAVIN SCHMIDT
The
heat in the past two years has been caused by human-caused climate
change with a boost from an El Niño event, which has now aded.
Yet
the record heat, clearly, is continuing.
The
(presumed) record warm year of 2016 has brought flood disasters to
the U.S., the latest of which is still devastating
parts of Louisiana,
as well as China.
Typically
hot locations, such as India,
Kuwait and Iraq,
set new benchmarks for what constitutes their hottest days.
Meanwhile,
the world's oceans are suffering through the longest-lasting global
coral bleaching event on record.
La Niña may break the fever temporarily
Climate
projections show that the odds favor a weak La Niña to develop in
the tropical Pacific Ocean. If this occurs, it would be expected to
hold down global temperature anomalies, and possibly interrupt the
constant string of record warm months, at least for a while.
In
fact, global average temperature departures from average had been
declining in recent months, though July marks an uptick compared to
June, NASA found.
Global
temperature anomalies since 1956, broken up into 20-year averages
compared to the 20th century baseline. IMAGE:
CLIMATE CENTRAL
You
can think of El Niño as a driver pressing the gas pedal on a car all
the way to the floor, while La Niña is more like a driver still
pressing the gas, but at a more moderate pace.
However,
even La Niña years have been warming as a result of long-term global
warming, and it's possible the developing La Niña could set a record
for the mildest La Niña year.
For
climate scientists, what matters is the long-term trend over decades
to centuries, making monthly records much less significant compared
to the steady increase in temperatures throughout the 20th and 21st
centuries.
The
long-term record shows an unmistakable upward trend in global
temperatures, with warming accelerating in the oceans and atmosphere
in recent decades.
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