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Environment

We Just Can't Seem to Catch a Break From Worrying Warmth

February made it nine straight months of record high global temperatures — with little chance of a significant break any time soon.

ImaGeo iconImaGeoBy Tom YulsmanMar 8, 2024 6:40 PM
Ice Free Great Lakes
Thanks to very warm winter temperatures, ice coverage of the Great Lakes reached historically low levels this winter. The five lakes are seen here in an image acquired by the Suomi NPP satellite on Feb. 24, 2024. (Credit: NASA Earth Observatory)

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Month by month, and season by season, global heating records continue to fall.

After 2023 came in as warmest year (it wasn't even close), and 2024 started with record high temperatures, it should come as no surprise that February was weirdly warm too.

The red line in the graph above shows the evolution of Earth's average surface air temperature for the year so far. The orange line shows the record for 2023, and the dashed one shows the average for 1991-2020. All years between 1940 and 2023 are depicted in light gray. (Credit: Copernicus Climate Change Service)

According to the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service, last month was the warmest February on record. The global average surface temperature was 1.77 degrees C (3.2 F) above the estimated February average for the pre-industrial era, according to the Copernicus analysis.

Moreover, December through February — meteorological winter in the Northern Hemisphere — also was the warmest such period on record.

This map of the contiguous United States shows how temperatures departed from average for meteorological winter — December 2023 through February 2024. The season was unusually warm almost everywhere, with the contiguous U.S. as a whole experiencing its warmest such period on record. (Credit: NOAA)

The United States got no exemption. According to an analysis released today by NOAA, the December through February winter season ranked as warmest on record for the contiguous U.S.

Considering just February, the month came in as third warmest in NOAA's 130-year record.

Breaching the 1.5 C Degree Limit

February's numbers make it clear that for 12 months in a row, the globe has exceeded the 1.5-degree C limit agreed to under the Paris Agreement. That limit was set to avoid significant escalation of climate risks. But it's important to remember that it pertains to the long term — meaning decades, not years. So it's premature to proclaim the treaty a failure.

Even so, breaching 1.5 degrees C for 12 months — an entire year — is a worrying sign that we're not yet slashing our emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases fast enough to keep to the limit.

Our sluggish progress is impacting billions of people around the world. According to a separate report released yesterday by Climate Central, about 80 percent of Earth’s population — some 6.7 billion people — was exposed to unusual warmth linked to climate change between December 2023 and February 2024.

When Will We Catch a Break?

As this map shows, the worrying warmth is likely to continue for at least the next three months:

Climate models are predicting above normal temperatures for almost all of the globe during March, April and May of 2024. (Credit: International Research Institute for Climate and Society, Columbia University, https://iri.columbia.edu)

Of course, there could be surprises ahead, including less warmth than models are forecasting. But the opposite also is quite possible.

Beyond May, the odds of finally catching a break increase. That's because the strong El Niño that has been influencing our weather, and contributing to record-setting warmth, is fading and likely will be gone by June. Moreover, the odds are greater than even that El Niño's opposite, La Niña, will emerge in the fall. And La Niña tends to have a moderating effect on temperatures.

Areas of red and orange show where sea surface temperatures were running warmer than average on March 5, 2024. Blue tones show areas of cooler than average sea surface temperatures. (Credit: Copernicus Climate Change Service)

There may be a hint of La Niña's birth in the map above. You can see it in that little patch of blue, meaning relatively cool sea surface temperatures, along the Equator in the Pacific Ocean.

Most of the region is still very warm, characteristic of El Niño. But if cool water surfacing from the deep causes the blue patch to expand, and the atmosphere above begins to respond with changes in wind and precipitation patterns, it would probably herald La Niña's arrival.

Of course, that wouldn't arrest long-term global heating. But it just might give us a temporary reprieve from the unrelenting drumbeat of record-setting temperatures.

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