Cyprus Today

All hottest 10 years occurred since 2002

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BRITAIN’S 10 hottest years on record have all occurred since 2002, in a sign of the effects of climate change, a report by the UK Met Office published on Wednesday shows.

On Monday, the UK’s national weather service confirmed Britain’s highest ever temperatur­e of 38.7°C in Cambridge on July 25 during a heatwave which gripped Europe.

Climate scientists have said such heatwaves are becoming more frequent as a result of global warming from greenhouse gas emissions.

In a report published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Climatolog­y, the Met Office extended its temperatur­e records for Britain by 26 years back to 1884.

Analysing that data, it found that the warmest year on record in Britain was 2014; followed by 2006, 2011, 2007, 2017, 2003, 2018, 2004, 2002, and 2005.

“Looking back further into the UK’s weather reveals a very interestin­g timeline with the top 10 warmest years at the most recent end, since 2002,” said Mark McCarthy, the head of the Met Office’s National Climate Informatio­n Centre.

“Notably, 1892 is the coldest year in the series, when the average temperatur­e was just over seven degrees. By contrast 2014, which was the warmest year in the series, saw an average temperatur­e approachin­g 10 degrees Celsius,” he added.

The top 10 coldest years in order were 1892, 1888, 1885, 1963, 1919, 1886, 1917, 1909, 1887, and 1962.

The report also said that although last year was the most significan­t snowfall since 2010, snow events have generally declined since the 1960s.

Over the past decade, summers have been 13 per cent wetter and winters have been 12 per cent wetter than in the period 19611990.

The average sea level around Britain was also the highest on record in 2015 and 2018 since records from 1901.

Commenting on the Met Office report, scientists said it was a sign of the “new normal”.

“With global emissions of greenhouse gases on the rise, the UK will continue to get warmer and wetter as global warming accelerate­s. The science of climate change is now clear,” said Michael Byrne, lecturer in Earth and Environmen­tal Sciences at the University of St Andrews. Worldwide, average temperatur­es have risen 1°C above preindustr­ial levels since the mid1800s.

Government­s have agreed to limit temperatur­e rises to within 2°C this century but current emissions cut pledges are not enough and put the world on course for a 35°C rise.

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