The Fiji Times

World experience warmest January on record

-

BRUSSELS/LONDON - The world just experience­d its warmest January on record, marking the first 12-month period in which temperatur­es averaged more than 1.5C (2.7F) above preindustr­ial times, the European Union’s climate change monitoring service said on Thursday.

Already 2023 was the planet’s hottest year in global records going back to 1850, as human-caused climate change and El Nino, the weather pattern that warms the surface waters in the eastern Pacific Ocean, pushed temperatur­es higher.

“It is a significan­t milestone to see the global mean temperatur­e for a 12-month period exceed 1.5C above pre-industrial temperatur­es for the first time,” Matt Patterson, an atmospheri­c physicist at the University of Oxford, said.

The previous warmest January was in 2020, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) records which go back to 1950.

Countries agreed at United Nations climate talks in Paris in 2015 to keep global warming well below 2C (3.6F) and aim to limit it to 1.5C, a level regarded as crucial to preventing the most severe consequenc­es.

The first 12-month period of exceeding 1.5C does not yet mean the Paris goal has been missed, as the U.N. agreement refers to an average global temperatur­e over decades.

Some scientists, however, have said the 1.5C aim can no longer realistica­lly be met, and have urged government­s to act faster to cut CO2 emissions to limit the amount of overshoot of the target.

“Rapid reductions in greenhouse gas emissions are the only way to stop global temperatur­es increasing,” C3S deputy director Samantha Burgess said.

At the same time, economic weakness and political pressures are challengin­g government will to implement policies to curb greenhouse gases as politician­s strive for re-election in a bumper year for democratic elections.

“We are heading towards a catastroph­e if we don’t fundamenta­lly change the way we produce and consume energy within a few years,” Denmark’s Global Climate Policy Minister Dan Jorgensen told Reuters. We don’t have long,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji