
CNNĀ āĀ This week saw theĀ hottest global temperatureĀ ever recorded, according to data from two climate tracking agencies.
On Monday, the average global temperatureĀ reached 17.01 degrees CelsiusĀ (62.62 Fahrenheit), the highest in the US National Centers for Environmental Predictionās data, which goes back to 1979. On Tuesday, it climbed even further, reaching 17.18 degrees Celsius. The previous record of 16.92 degrees Celsius was set in August 2016.
The European Unionās Copernicus Climate Change Service on Wednesday alsoĀ tweetedĀ that Mondayās global temperature was a record in its data set.
Experts warn that the record could be broken several more times this year. Robert Rohde, lead scientist at Berkeley Earth, saidĀ in a Twitter postĀ on Tuesday that the world āmay well see a few even warmer days over the next 6 weeks.ā
This global record is a preliminary one, but itās another indication ofĀ how fast the world is heating up, as the arrival of the natural climate phenomenonĀ El NiƱo, which has a warming effect, is layered on top of climate change-fueled global heating.
āItās not a record to celebrate and it wonāt be a record for long, with northern hemisphere summer still mostly ahead and El NiƱo developing,ā said Friederike Otto, senior lecturer in climate science at the Grantham Institute for Climate Change and the Environment in the UK.
This year has already seen heat records broken around the world, with devastating consequences.
In the US, Texas and the South swelteredĀ in a brutal heat waveĀ in late June, with triple-digit-Fahrenheit temperatures and extreme humidity. Soaring temperatures in Mexico have killedĀ at least 112 peopleĀ since March.
A searing heat wave in IndiaĀ killed at least 44 peopleĀ across the state of Bihar. China, too, has experiencedĀ several blistering heat wavesĀ and it registered theĀ highest number of hot daysĀ ā where the maximum daily temperature exceeded 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit) ā over a six-month period since records began.
The UK recordedĀ the hottest JuneĀ since records began in 1884, according to the countryās national weather service, the Met Office. The average temperature for the month was 15.8 degrees Celsius (60.4 Fahrenheit), breaking the previous record by 0.9 degree Celsius.
āAlongside natural variability, the background warming of the Earthās atmosphere due to human induced climate change has driven up the possibility of reaching record high temperatures,ā Paul Davies, Met Office climate extremes principal fellow and chief meteorologist, said in a statement.
As the climate crisis intensifies, scientists are clear thatĀ record-breaking heat wavesĀ are set to become more frequent and more severe.
The new global average temperature record is another wake-up call, Otto told CNN. āIt just shows we have to stop burning fossil fuels, not in decades, now. This day is just a number, but for many people and ecosystems itās a loss of life and livelihood.ā
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