The Scotsman

High February temperatur­es smash global weather records

- Ilona Amos Environmen­t Correspond­ent

Last month was the world’s warmest February on record, it has been revealed.

It was also the ninth month in a row where temperatur­es were the hottest in modern historyfor the time of year. sea surface temperatur­e sin February 2024 were also at their highest ever known.

Figures released by the Eufunded Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) show the global average surface air temperatur­e in February was 13.54C.

That is 0.81 c above average for the month over the past 30 years and 0.12C hotter than the previous warmest February, in 2016.

Last month was 1.77C warmer than in pre-industrial times, before humans began burning fossil fuels on a massive scale and pumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere – way over the1.5ctarg et warming limit set out in the Paris Agreement.

The global average temperatur­e for the past 12 months is the highest on record too, at 0.68C over the 1991-2020 figure and 1.56C above levels in 18501900. The daily global average temperatur­e was exceptiona­lly high during the first half of the month, reaching 2C above the 1850-1900 levels on four consecutiv­e days.

Europe experience­d the most extreme heat anomalies in February, with the average temperatur­e 3.3C above readings in 1991-2020. Central and eastern Europe were the hottest of all.

Elsewhere, northern Siberia, central and north-west North America, the majority of South America, much of Africa and western Australia were also hotter than usual.

Oceans were also much warmer. Monitoring shows the average global sea surface temperatur­e in February was 21.06 C, the warmest for any month on record.

The previous peak of 20.98C was set in August 2023. A new absolute high of 21.09C was reached on a single day at the end of the month.

The record-breaking monthly temperatur­e trend comes as annual global temperatur­es follow the same pattern, with the past ten years the warmest on earth for millennia and 2023 the hottest of all–by a significan­t margin. The El Niño natural weather system, which warms oceans and affects winds, has been pushing up temperatur­es in recent times.

But climate change, caused by emissions of carbon dioxide and methane from human activities, has been named as the major driver of escalating temperatur­es.

“February joins the long streak of records of the last few months,” said Carlo Buontempo, director of Copernicus Climate Change Service. “As remarkable as this might appear, it is not really surprising as the continuous warming of the climate system inevitably leads to new temperatur­e extremes.

“The climate responds to the actual concentrat­ions of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, so unless we manage to stabilise those we will inevitably face new global temperatur­e records and their consequenc­es.”

Last year alone saw widespread severe environmen­tal conditions linked to climate change, including major droughts, deadly wild fires, catastroph­ic storm sand devastatin­g flood sin many countries across the world.

Climate change, caused by emissions of carbon dioxide and methane from human activities, has been named as the major driver of escalating temperatur­es

The continuous warming of the climate system inevitably leads to new temperatur­e extremes

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