2024 was the hottest year of land in the record, passing a threshold of hazardous heat


It is official: 2024 was really hotter in record. It was also the first year in recorded history that the average land temperature was higher than 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels.

Scientists described those gloomy milestones in a report issued on January 10 by the European Union climate change service. Numerous other global recordings were destroyed throughout 2024, noted researchers, including for the level of atmospheric greenhouse gas, air temperatures and sea surface temperatures.

The global soil temperature in 2024 was 15.10 ° C – 1.6 degrees C higher than the average from 1850-1900, designated as the preindustrial reference period. It was also 0.72 degrees C higher than the average planet temperature from 1991-2020.

July 22, 2024, was a special distance: the whole planet was shaking, bringing the average global temperature to a new high record of 17.16 ° C (63 ° Fahrenheit).

Finding the Cements Cements Cements What was already visible until December: temperatures amplified on land and sea in 2024 were unprecedented since the beginning of the registries-and the heat had deadly consequences across the globe.

The rapid heat of the planet is already increasing the global annual number of extreme weather events, from fires to drought to rapid hurricane intensification. Keeping average global temperatures below that 1.5 degrees C – especially by reducing the emissions of people’s greenhouse gases – would significantly reduce the threat of those risks, as described in a special report of 2018 by the intergovernmental panel for climate change.

The year 2024 was not the first time that Earth temperatures were raised above the threshold 1.5 degrees C – the planet’s pockets have been raised above that landmark many times in the last decade, for example (also the warmest 10 years in record). And 2023 approached very close.

But 2024 was the first year the whole globe exceeded the threshold.

Carolyn Gramling

Carolyn Gramling is the writer of the land and climate. She has bachelor’s degrees in European geology and history and a doctorate. in maritime geochemistry by MIT and Oceanographic Institution of Woods Hole.


#hottest #year #land #record #passing #threshold #hazardous #heat
Image Source : www.sciencenews.org

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top