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The world’s ‘extraordinary’ summer streak is prolonged in March

The world’s ‘extraordinary’ heat streak is longer in March (AFP image)

Global temperature Historical high levels in March, the European Union agency that monitors Climate change On Tuesday, he said, prolonging an unprecedented heat streak, which has pushed the limit of scientific clarification.
In Europe, it was the hottest march recorded by a significant margin, the Copernicus Climate Change Service said. As a planetary heating, rapid rapid rainfall in an continent warming compared to any other Fossil fuel emissions Keep up
Meanwhile, the world witnessed the second hottest march in the Copernicus dataset, which maintains a record or near-record-brakeing temperature since July 2023.
Since then, virtually every month has been at least 1.5 ° C hotter before the industrial revolution, when humans started burning coal, oil and gas on a large scale.
Pre-March-industrial time was 1.6C above, the expansion of an anomaly is so unusual that scientists are still trying to explain it completely.
“We are still above 1.6C, which is really notable,” said Freedrak Otto of the Grantham Institute for Climate Change and the Environment of Imperial College London, which is really notable. ”
“We are very strongly in the grip of human-inviting climate change,” he told AFP.
Scientists predicted that the global temperature would be reduced after a warming E -Nino incident in early 2024, but they have well equipped well in 2025.
“We are still experiencing extremely high temperatures worldwide. This is an extraordinary situation,” said Robert Watord, a leading scientist at the United Nations climate expert panel IPCC.
‘Climate breakdown’
Scientists have warned that every fraction of one degree of global warming increases intensity and frequency. Extreme weather events As heatwave, heavy rainfall and drought.
Climate change is not only about rising temperatures, but also the knocking of all extra heat stuck in the atmosphere and seas by greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane.
Warm seas mean high evaporation and high moisture in the atmosphere, causing heavy delugges and energy to the storms.
It also affects global rainfall patterns.
Copernicus stated that there was 0.26C from the last hot record for the prescribed month in March 2014 in Europe.
Parts of the continent experienced “dry march on records and their most luxurious” for almost half a century, the European Center for Medium-Rage Weather Forecast’s Samantha Burges said, which runs the Copernicus climate monitor.
Bill McGire, a climate scientist at University College London, stated that the opposite extreme range “clearly shows that a volatile climate means more and large weather extremes”.
“As the climate breaks progress, more broken records are expected,” he told the AFP.
Climate Group CEO Helen Clarkson said that concerns over the global economy were coming into the limelight when India was ending the scorching heat and Australia was flooded.
“The threat to the planet exists, but our focus is elsewhere,” Clarkson said.
Esoteric heat
The Global Heat Serge inspired 2023 and then 2024 to be the hottest years on records.
Last year was also the first full calendar year exceeding 1.5C – the safe warming limit was agreed by most countries under the Paris Climate Agreement.
This single year violation does not represent permanent crossing of the 1.5C border, which has been measured for decades. But scientists warned that the target was getting out of reach.
If the 30 -year trend continues to grow, the world will reach 1.5 C by June 2030.
Scientists are unanimous that burning of fossil fuels operates largely long -term global warming.
But they are less certain about what else can be contributed to this Record heat spike.
Votard stated that “there were events that are yet to be explained,” but the extraordinary temperature still fell within the upper range of scientific estimates of climate change.
Experts feel that changes in global cloud patterns, aerial pollution and the ability to store carbon in the natural sinks can be one of the factors contributing to the planet’s overheating in forests and oceans.
Scientists say that the current period is likely to be the hottest Earth for the last 125,000 years.

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