The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: World Breaches +1.5°C For Record Number of Days
Dear Diary. It’s now very apparent that a number of factors have ramped up the Earth’s temperature to a little over +1.5°C over preindustrial conditions. I went into detail about that here:
Premiere climate scientists like Dr. Michael Mann think that mainly because of our current strong El Niño this +1.5°C breach will be temporary, but that leaves me nervous about how long it will take before the average temperature of the planet gets over +1.5°C no matter what state we find ENSO. The effects this year of being at the +1.5°C level have been devastating, particularly in the Mediterranean area where we saw extreme flooding in Greece and Libya this summer, killing thousands, and eye-popping life threatening heatwaves across much of Asia and the Middle East.
The BBC has encapsulated a nice article showing how much the planet has breached 1.5°C, which I’m using for today’s main subject:
BBC News – World breaches key 1.5C warming mark for record number of days
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) October 7, 2023
Although this is a sign of things to come, a few days does not make a long term average. The temp would also spike over any target in the short term.
Don't give up#ClimateChangehttps://t.co/P2AlM3YNGV
World breaches key 1.5C warming mark for record number of days – BBC News
World breaches key 1.5C warming mark for record number of days
10/07/2023
By Matt McGrath, Mark Poynting, Becky Dale & Jana Tauschinski
BBC News climate & science and data journalism team
The world is breaching a key warming threshold at a rate that has scientists concerned, a BBC analysis has found.
On about a third of days in 2023, the average global temperature was at least 1.5C higher than pre-industrial levels.
Staying below that marker long-term is widely considered crucial to avoid the most damaging impacts of climate change.
But 2023 is “on track” to be the hottest year on record, and 2024 could be hotter.
“It is a sign that we’re reaching levels we haven’t been before,” says Dr Melissa Lazenby, from the University of Sussex.
This latest finding comes after record September temperatures and a summer of extreme weather events across much of the world.
- Climate change played major role in Libya floods
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- UN calls for radical changes to slow warming
When political leaders gathered in Paris in December 2015, they signed an agreement to keep the long-term rise in global temperatures this century “well below” 2C and to make every effort to keep it under 1.5C.
The agreed limits refer to the difference between global average temperatures now and what they were in the pre-industrial period, between 1850 and 1900 – before the widespread use of fossil fuels.
Breaching these Paris thresholds doesn’t mean going over them for a day or a week but instead involves going beyond this limit across a 20 or 30-year average.
This long-term average warming figure currently sits at around 1.1C to 1.2C.
But the more often 1.5C is breached for individual days, the closer the world gets to breaching this mark in the longer term.
The first time this happened in the modern era was for a few days in December 2015, when politicians were signing the deal on the 1.5C threshold.
Since then the limit has been repeatedly broken, typically only for short periods.
In 2016, influenced by a strong El Niño event – a natural climate shift that tends to increase global temperatures – the world saw around 75 days that went above that mark.
But BBC analysis of data from the Copernicus Climate Change Service shows that, up to 2 October, around 86 days in 2023 have been over 1.5C warmer than the pre-industrial average. That beats the 2016 record well before the end of the year.
There is some uncertainty in the exact number of days that have breached the 1.5C threshold, because the numbers reflect a global average which can come with small data discrepancies. But the margin by which 2023 has already passed 2016 figures gives confidence the record has already been broken.
“The fact that we are reaching this 1.5C anomaly daily, and for a longer number of days, is concerning,” said Dr Lazenby.
One important factor in driving up these temperature anomalies is the onset of El Niño conditions. This was confirmed just a few months ago – although it is still weaker than its 2016 peak.
These conditions are helping to pump heat from the eastern Pacific Ocean into the atmosphere. This may explain why 2023 is the first year in which the 1.5C anomaly has been recorded between June and October – when combined with the long-term warming from burning fossil fuels.
- A really simple guide to climate change
- Four ways climate change affects the weather
- What is El Niño, and how does it change the weather?
“This is the first time we’re seeing this in the northern hemisphere summer, which is unusual, it’s pretty shocking to see what’s been going on,” said Prof Ed Hawkins, from the University of Reading.
“I know our Australian colleagues are particularly worried about what’s going to be the consequences for them with their summer approaching [for instance extreme wildfires], especially with El Niño.”
Days when the temperature difference has exceeded 1.5C continued into September, with some more than 1.8C above the pre-industrial average.
The month as a whole was 1.75C above the pre-industrial level, and the year to date is around 1.4C above the 1850-1900 average, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service.
While 2023 is “on track” to become the warmest year on record, it is not expected to breach the 1.5C warming threshold as a global average across the full 12 months.
Contributing factors
The world’s oceans have also been experiencing unusually high temperatures this year and in turn, releasing further heat into the atmosphere.
“The North Atlantic Ocean is the warmest we’ve ever recorded, and if you look at the North Pacific Ocean, there’s a tongue of anomalously warm water stretching all the way from Japan to California,” said Dr Jennifer Francis from the Woodwell Climate Research Centre in the US.
While greenhouse gas emissions are increasing average temperatures, the precise reasons for why these sea temperatures have surged is not fully known.
One theory – which is still uncertain – is that a fall in air pollution from shipping across the North Atlantic has reduced the number of small particles and increased warming.
Up until now, these “aerosols” had been partly offsetting the effect of greenhouse gas emissions by reflecting some of the sun’s energy and keeping the Earth’s surface cooler than it would have been otherwise.
Another perhaps less well-known factor is the situation around Antarctica.
There have been ongoing concerns about the state of sea ice around the coldest continent, with data showing the levels far below any previous winter.
But according to some experts, two spikes in temperature in recent months in Antarctica – triggered by natural variability – have boosted the global average. However, it’s difficult to identify the precise influence of long-term human-caused warming.
“In early July, Antarctica got really warm, they saw record temperatures, which is still 20 or 30 degrees Celsius below zero,” said Dr Karsten Haustein, from the University of Leipzig.
“And what we see with 1.5C and 1.8C anomalies we are seeing now, it is partially down to Antarctica again.”
While the northern hemisphere will naturally cool in autumn and winter, there is a view that the large temperature differences from the pre-industrial period may persist, especially as El Niño reaches a peak at the end of this year or early next.
Researchers believe that these ongoing high temperature anomalies should be a wake-up call for political leaders, who will gather in Dubai in November for the COP28 climate summit.
Action on emissions is needed, they say, and not just in the long-term.
In March, the UN urged countries to accelerate climate action, stressing effective options to reduce emissions were available now, from renewables to electric vehicles.
“It’s not just about reaching an end goal, of net zero by 2050, it’s about how we get there,” said Prof Hawkins.
“The IPCC [the UN’s climate body] very clearly says we need to halve emissions over this decade, and then get to net zero. It’s not just about reaching net zero at some point, it’s about the pathway to get there.”
And as this year’s extreme weather events have shown – from heatwaves in Europe to extreme rainfall in Libya – the consequences of climate change increase with every fraction of a degree of warming.
Related Topics
- Greenhouse gas emissions
- Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
- COP28
- El Niño
- Climate change
- Oceans
Here are some other “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
[1]
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
Incredible tropical nights in #Austria with overnight Tmins up to 21.3C;also 20.9C at Vienna and 18.5C at Bratislava,Slovakia but they all dropped daytime.
In Germany Record high Tmins still standing:
17.1 Holzkirchen
16.3 Trostberg
16.3 Mühldorf
15.6 Weihenstephan https://t.co/fUgXclRgDL
[2]
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
Exceptionally high minimum temperatures yesterday in the Netherlands, many broke the October records:
17.8 Wijk aan Zee 0.2C from Dutch Oct record high Tmin
17.3 Berkhout
16.7 De Kooy
17.6 Hoek van Holland
16.9 Marknesse
16.8 Rotterdam
17.4 Amsterdam Schiphol AP https://t.co/5b3b4qJZ0w
6 🧵 EUROPE HISTORIC HEAT WAVE
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
Read it to the bottom
Slovenia,Croatia,Spain,France,Switzerland and Italy
SLOVENIA
31.3 Cronomelj NEW NATIONAL OCTOBER RECORD
28.9 Murska Sobota
27.3 Maribor
CROATIA
30.4 Ogulin
29.8 Split Resnik
29.2 Zagreb Maksimir 28.9 Pleso
28.1 Varazdin
Another record day in Eastern Canada with the warmth cornered in Newfoundland & Labrador
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 7, 2023
October Records were shattered with big margins
RECORDS TMAX
26.1 Mary's Harbour
23.9 Nain
23.4 Makkovik
RECORDS TMIN
15.5 Makkovik
13 Churchill Falls
12.6 Hopedale
12.4 Cartwright
8.7 Nain https://t.co/VFjakjmzEr
US WEATHER
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 7, 2023
Today the heat is in the West with still widespread 90s and 100s.
Record warm nights in Oregon with an incredible Tmin of 68F at Troutdale,full 5F above the old October record.
Further South 44.9C in Mexico and October heat record at Catacamas in Honudras with 36.1C. pic.twitter.com/Llm5WDkXnk
The low temperature at Phoenix Sky Harbor was 79 degrees this morning which is 10 degrees above normal and a new record warm low for today's date. #azwx pic.twitter.com/2bolFdVMu4
— NWS Phoenix (@NWSPhoenix) October 8, 2023
Another Mississippi River record! Previous record was last October, with a depth of -10.75′. Tough break for farmers to see significant reductions in barge transport of crops during the peak part of harvest season 2 years in a row. Barges carry about 60% of U.S. grain exports. https://t.co/RQM7o6UEQM
— Jeff Masters (@DrJeffMasters) October 8, 2023
Here is some more new September 2023 climatology:
September 2023 in China had an average temperature of 18.2C, which is +1.3C above the 1991-2020 norm and was the hottest September on records.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
The national average precipitation was 69.1mm(+3.8mm above normal).
Details below: https://t.co/sx6hwMt1Go
September 2023 in the United Kingdom had an average temperature of 15.2C, which is +2.2C above normal and tied 2006 as the WARMEST ON RECORD
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
Especially warm in England.
Average rainfall was 119.4mm which is 31% above normal.
See temperatures and rainfalls anomalies map by UKMO. pic.twitter.com/boMRWbxVDX
September 2023 in #Ireland had temperature anomalies between +1C (Makree) and +2.1C (Dublin) above the 81-10 norm (0.3C less for 91-20)
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
All country except Bellmulet was wetter than average ,Dublin was the most with 225% of normal rainfall
See rainfall anomalies map by Met Eireann pic.twitter.com/ej3UwT1v6G
September 2023 in #Spain (Continental) had an average temperature of 20.2C ,+1.1C above normal.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
Balearic 23.3C +1,0C
Canary 21.7C -0,1C
Average rainfall was 67.4mm,+51% above normal and was the wettest since 1999.
It was drier than average in Balearic Isl. and wetter in Canary https://t.co/zAtIJdgSJs
September 2023 in #Italy had a temperature anomaly of +2.17C and was the 3rd warmest on records.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
Anomalies were the highest in the Northeastern Alps >+3C and lower in Sicily (around +1C).
Map by ISAC-CNR pic.twitter.com/FOcP6lRW8A
September 2023 in the Czech Republic had an average temperature of 16.5C which is a whopping +3.5C above the 1991-2020 normal and was the hottest September on records.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) October 8, 2023
Details below: https://t.co/HDZaSStetJ
After having their warmest May, June, July, and second warmest August since 1940, Canada (🇨🇦) just had their warmest September. This chart shows the combined May-September temperature for each year. 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/tsi35w1Kef
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) October 8, 2023
Here is More Climate and Weather News from Sunday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
As climate records are falling like dominoes, it's more important than ever for people to understand the risks of inaction AND the solutions that could lead us to a better future. Read or listen to my convo with @SeanSublette here: https://t.co/mGH6vyqZZG
— The Real Prof. Katharine Hayhoe (@KHayhoe) October 8, 2023
'Given that people will be moving in their hundreds of millions or billions over the coming decades, we must prepare.'
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) October 8, 2023
This is our #NomadCenturyhttps://t.co/vpy85Oj5XE
Exxon did this. Shell did this. TotalEnergies did this. PetroChina did this. Chevron did this. BP did this. Gazprom did this. Coal India did this. Saudi Aramco did this: Just 100 companies caused 71% of man-made global warming emissions#climate #ClimateCrisis https://t.co/zC2JE3zYXF
— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) October 8, 2023
Pope Francis bluntly urged more aggressive action to curb emissions at the next U.N. climate meeting in eight weeks. "Our responses have not been adequate, while the world in which we live is collapsing and may be nearing the breaking point.”https://t.co/xmPbFOFz9Z
— Inside Climate News (@insideclimate) October 8, 2023
A detailed interactive map of the United States’ vulnerability to climate dangers was released this week. https://t.co/wRa4rASrb0
— grist (@grist) October 7, 2023
Last month was the most anomalous on record for temperatures in the Southern Hemisphere…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) October 8, 2023
[Data from @CopernicusECMWF ERA5 reanalysis] pic.twitter.com/nWW1R5Mzij
“‘It’s the consumer who contributes to increasing CO2 emissions, not the producer.’ I point out that this is the logic of a drug dealer. Al Jaber brushes this off with a gesture.” https://t.co/QRUxG0Rtz4
— David Wallace-Wells (@dwallacewells) October 8, 2023
Some of this is due to melting ice, but a lot of this is the cloud feedback: as the climate warms, cloud area is reduced, particularly low marine clouds. https://t.co/ZgfVl738wo
— Andrew Dessler (@AndrewDessler) October 8, 2023
This summer’s record-breaking marine heat wave may have been the “nail in the coffin” for an iconic species of coral that serves as a building block of marine life around Florida. Still, scientists see other “signs of hope” in the state’s reefs. https://t.co/fVYPzQJv5J
— Svein Tveitdal (@tveitdal) October 8, 2023
Your 'moment of doom' for Oct. 8, 2023 ~ Toxic storms!
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) October 8, 2023
"In the '90s, there were 2 or 3 sand and dust storms per year in Tajikistan. Now there can be up to 35…The sand and dust also falls on the region's many glaciers… and speeds up their melting" https://t.co/Tv1p9OmZZ7
I don't think the whole planet will ever see the dramatic "overnight" tipping points many doomsaysrs say are likely.
— Edgar McGregor (@edgarrmcgregor) October 8, 2023
However, we've already seen certain regions lose features of their climate seemlingly over a matter of months, only for that feature to never return. https://t.co/4YWHPnyhf5
The beauty of an October morning high on the Peak District’s Snake Pass gradually eroded be vapour trails &accompanying cirrus clouds. Noise, visual impact, lots of CO2 &warming from contrails. Aviation serves mostly wealthy frequent flyers, hence so little control of the sector. pic.twitter.com/v5uIYcCEZl
— Kevin Anderson (@KevinClimate) October 8, 2023
Today’s News on Sustainable, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Good climate news this week
— Assaad Razzouk (@AssaadRazzouk) October 9, 2023
1 Ireland first to deny LNG facility on climate grounds
2 Pope in blistering attack on Big Oil
3 EVs pass US tipping point for mass adoption
4 Bulgaria to exit coal by 2038
5 EU fossil fuel power down 21%
6 Indonesia to unveil $20b energy transition https://t.co/axuD6P7Ods
Waste and material flows from renewables is a problem — which we can and should solve — but it pales in comparison to the devastation of fossil fuels and other waste. pic.twitter.com/w1udtcGaSQ
— Dr. Jonathan Foley (@GlobalEcoGuy) October 8, 2023
Can someone explain why we aren’t mining our e-waste instead of the planet?
— Xiye Bastida (@xiyebastida) October 8, 2023
“We generate around 40 million tons of electronic waste every year. That's like throwing 800 laptops every second” pic.twitter.com/Y108vGuBih
Labour to unveil plan for largest expansion of renewable power in British history https://t.co/BjKUMnFK63
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) October 8, 2023
South Australia went from 1% renewables in 2007 to 68% in just over 15 years. It's on track for 100% renewable energy by 2030.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) October 7, 2023
It can be done.
We have the solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate#climate #energy #renewables #solar #wind pic.twitter.com/swIxJQe1Ga
China has begun work on an $11bn desert renewables project in Inner Mongolia. The 16GW facility will be the world's largest desert renewable project: https://t.co/PNS5Lb4w1U
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) October 7, 2023
We have so many solutions. Shelve fossil fuels and Implement them.#ActOnClimate #climate #energy pic.twitter.com/tcu1pRG2hL
In the US EV’s emit 60% less emissions. This includes production, driving, maintenance, etc… the whole lifecycle. Notice where gas loses out… “tank to wheel”. Gas cars are much less efficient, with 30% or less of gas turning the wheels. The rest is lost in the process. https://t.co/l97XLDRgjE
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) October 9, 2023
This autonomous boat eats trash and is powered by 100% #cleanenergy – cleaning up over 50,000 kg of debris a day.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) October 8, 2023
Time to clean up our mess, end #plasticpollution, and #ActOnClimate.#ClimateAction #ClimateCrisis #waste #useless #buyless #GreenNewDeal pic.twitter.com/lp9eU6lW9G
Heat pumps good, gas boilers bad.
— Dr Paul Dorfman (@dorfman_p) October 9, 2023
'How heat pumps became a Nordic success story.'
#climate #ClimateAction https://t.co/SzDosktLyS
#Ad Industry must reduce its carbon footprint and automation is the key. Read the article to learn more: https://t.co/xNfnJSvZT4
— Economist Impact (@economistimpact) September 6, 2023
More from the Weather Department:
https://t.co/FmQdhxcOdh Top Forecasts We're Watching For The Week Ahead
— James Wilson (@tornadokid3) October 8, 2023
October 8, 2023
Meteorologist Orelon Sidney takes a look into the week and shares the top forecasts we're following. pic.twitter.com/uj12bImwYL
Lidia and Max – A pair of tropical troublemakers 😉 pic.twitter.com/WfxouzJAJt
— James Wilson (@tornadokid3) October 9, 2023
The next week will consist of anomalous high-latitude blocking, with unusual warmth in Canada & cooler than normal temps in the eastern & southern US.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) October 8, 2023
While it’s still early in the season, this waveguide configuration would be favorable for a NE US snowstorm in the winter: pic.twitter.com/qMinf4dJan
Lightning striking vehicles caught on camera: You never know where lightning might strike during thunderstorms. pic.twitter.com/SUMElKvKEu
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) October 8, 2023
More on the Environment:
For years, the mysterious “urban runoff mortality syndrome” has been decimating salmon in the Northwest.
— Earthjustice (@Earthjustice) October 8, 2023
The culprit is a chemical found in tires called 6PPD. To put an end to this existential threat to wild salmon populations, tribes are petitioning @EPA to take action on 6PPD. pic.twitter.com/YfF5u1CR8w
Some of this is due to melting ice, but a lot of this is the cloud feedback: as the climate warms, cloud area is reduced, particularly low marine clouds. https://t.co/ZgfVl738wo
— Andrew Dessler (@AndrewDessler) October 8, 2023
RT if you want a global #PlasticsTreaty that will #StopPlasticPollution❗️ pic.twitter.com/CKlj7M2mFc
— WWF (@WWF) October 8, 2023
Scientists Have Created Synthetic Sponges That Soak Up Microplastics
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) October 8, 2023
Made from starch and gelatin, the biodegradable sponges remove as much as 90 percent of microplastics in tap water and seawaterhttps://t.co/1SGD1OZpFt
In 13 years humans have destroyed an ecosystem the size of Mexico. We need to do better. It’s time for a new deal for nature.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) October 8, 2023
There is no planet B. #ActOnClimate #climateemergency #climateaction #climate #energy #forests #nature #GreenNewDeal #biodiversity pic.twitter.com/C3dv7aEzRc
Antarctic winter sea ice has reached its lowest record, a full million km² below 2022, greater than the size of Egypt.
— UN Environment Programme (@UNEP) October 8, 2023
Due to the rapid shrinking of sea ice, Emperor penguins experienced unprecedented breeding failure last year, posing a severe threat to the Antarctic ecosystem.
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
I saved up for a good slide rule in high school in 1970. My dad got the HP 35 that I have in 1972 for $360 (1972 dollars!). Amazed at what a $20 (2023 dollars!) calculator can do, 51 years later! https://t.co/pGAtqVXFb1 pic.twitter.com/JuSdZpxlky
— Richard Heatwave Berler (@HeatwaveKGNS) October 8, 2023
SIX MORE DAYS: A “ring of fire” annular solar eclipse will sweep across much of the Southwest, passing over cities like Elko, NV., Albuquerque, San Antonio and Corpus Christi.
— Matthew Cappucci (@MatthewCappucci) October 8, 2023
The rest of the Lower 48 will see a partial solar eclipse.https://t.co/7yNG4rS7N6
The view from Kongma La Pass, Nepal. Elevation 5,540m (18,176'). Oxygen was 51% of the sea level value. Pressure was 522 mb. pic.twitter.com/dDp4slKYKz
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) October 8, 2023
Look at this majestic snow leopard at the Akron Zoo! 🐆 Instead of roaring, they make yowls and moans. pic.twitter.com/Qd5R42bv5q
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) October 8, 2023