17.18 degrees Celsius (62.92F) is the warmest daily global
temperature recorded since such records have been kept. It occurred
Tuesday, July 4, 2023. The previous record (17.01) was set the prior
day, and the most recent record before that was 16.92 set in August
2016. You may think that 63 degrees Fahrenheit doesn’t sound so
hot. You would be wrong; consider that this is the average global
temperature for the entire planet, including the coldest parts.
The
highest annual temperature ever recorded occurred in 2020 when it
tied 2016. Annual values consider the global values for the entire
calendar year. Given the El Nino event that is currently underway, it
is widely believed that 2023 and/or 2024 will surpass those previous
records. The past eight years have been the warmest on record
globally since records have been kept. The heat is fueled by
ever-rising greenhouse gas concentrations and accumulated heat,
according to six leading international temperature datasets
consolidated by the World Meteorological Organization.
Even
Climate Science’s most fervent deniers are now forced to admit that
global warming is happening. Even so, some may question the time
period. The climate is always changing, they posit, and the planet
has been this hot at times in the past. Although true, this statement
is misleading. Earth has not since we modern humans have been
around.
Records have been kept for data such as that
summarized here since around 1880. But accurate readings to measure
the warmest daily global temperature have only been kept since 1979.
How can we compare today’s temperatures to older data? This
requires the use of indirect measurements and proxies, since
systematic temperature records are only available for this relatively
short period. Some of the methods used include the following:
-
Historical documents, such as diaries, ship logs, and weather
journals.
- Proxy Data: indirect evidence of past climate
conditions that can be used to estimate temperature variations.
Various natural proxies can provide information about past
temperatures, such as tree rings, ice cores, corals, lake sediments,
and stalagmites. These proxies contain climate-sensitive information
that can be analyzed to reconstruct temperature patterns.
-
Instrumental Data Overlap, where modern temperature records overlap
with historical records or early instrumental measurements. These
methods can help with calibration.
- Climate models
(mathematical representations of the Earth's climate system).
By
combining these methods, scientists can reconstruct past temperature
patterns and make comparisons with present-day data. These
comparisons provide insights into long-term climate trends and help
understand how current temperature changes fit within the context of
historical climate variations.
Therefore, when we state
that the warmest days or the warmest years on record are occurring in
recent decades, we can say with certainty that this can be verified
over the past 140 years or so. But after examining all of the various
measurement data, we can also say with reasonable confidence that the
planet has not been this warm for well over 100,000 years. The last
time the Earth experienced similar warmth was likely during the
Eemian interglacial period, approximately 130,000 to 115,000 years
ago. During that period, global temperatures were somewhat higher
than today, and sea levels were higher as well.
To
summarize the comparison of current temperatures to past
temperatures, scientists have found that:
- The Earth is
experiencing a period of rapid warming, and the last few decades have
been among the warmest in thousands of years.
- The current rate
of temperature increase is unprecedented in geological records, far
exceeding natural variations that occurred over much longer
timescales.
- The warming trend has been associated with more
frequent and intense heatwaves, as well as changes in precipitation
patterns and extreme weather events.
- The increase in global
temperatures is attributed to human activities, particularly the
emission of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide, methane, and
nitrous oxide, into the atmosphere.
It's crucial to keep
in mind that comparing the current rate of warming to historical
geological periods is not an exact analogy, as human civilization has
developed during a relatively stable and cooler period in Earth's
history. The rapidity of the ongoing changes and their potential
impacts on ecosystems and human societies make them of great concern
and underscores the importance of addressing climate change and its
causes.
Climate change is happening in a big way, and this
is only the beginning. We have the power to prevent it from getting
much worse. All it will take is the will to do so. We’ve no time to
lose.
Thursday, July 6, 2023
17.18C, and what it means
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