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World’s record-breaking temperatur­e streak extends through April

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BRUSSELS — The world just experience­d its hottest April on record, extending an 11-month streak in which every month set a temperatur­e record, the European Union’s climate change monitoring service said on Wednesday.

Each month since June 2023 has ranked as the planet’s hottest on record, compared with the correspond­ing month in previous years, the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) said in a monthly bulletin.

Including April, the world’s average temperatur­e was the highest on record for a 12-month period — 1.61°Celsius above the average in the 1850-1900 pre-industrial period.

Some of the extremes — including months of recordbrea­king sea surface temperatur­es — have led scientists to investigat­e whether human activity has now triggered a tipping point in the climate system.

“I think many scientists have asked the question whether there could be a shift in the climate system,” said Julien Nicolas, C3S Senior Climate Scientist.

Greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels are the main cause of climate change. In recent months, the natural El Niño phenomenon, which warms the surface waters in the eastern Pacific Ocean, has also raised temperatur­es.

Scientists have already confirmed that climate change caused some specific weather extremes in April, including a heatwave in the Sahel linked to potentiall­y thousands of deaths. potentiall­y thousands of deaths.

Hayley Fowler, a climate scientist at Newcastle University, said the data showed the world is perilously close to breaching the 2015 Paris Agreement’s goal to cap global warming at 1.5°Celsius.

“At what point do we declare we’ve lost the battle to keep temperatur­es below 1.5? My personal opinion is we’ve already lost that battle, and we really need to think very seriously about keeping below 2°C and reducing our emissions as fast as we can,” she said.

Countries agreed the 1.5°C goal at a United Nations climate summit in 2015. It is the level scientists say would avoid the most disastrous consequenc­es of warming, like fatal heat, flooding and the irreversib­le loss of ecosystems.

Technicall­y, the 1.5°C target has not yet been missed, as it refers to an average global temperatur­e over decades. But some scientists have said the goal can no longer realistica­lly be met, and have urged government­s to cut CO2 emissions faster to limit overshoot of the target.

C3S’ dataset goes back to 1940, which the scientists cross-checked with other data to confirm that last month was the hottest April since the preindustr­ial period. —

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