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Europe faces alarming temperatur­e rise at double the global average, says report

- B J K

NAPLES, Italy—europe is the fastest-warming continent and its temperatur­es are rising at roughly twice the global average, two top climate monitoring organizati­ons reported Monday, warning of the consequenc­es for human health, glacier melt and economic activity.

The UN’S World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on and the European Union’s climate agency, Copernicus, said in a joint report that the continent has the opportunit­y to develop targeted strategies to speed up the transition to renewable resources like wind, solar and hydroelect­ric power in response to the effects of climate change.

The continent generated 43 percent of its electricit­y from renewable resources last year, up from 36 percent the year before, the agencies say in their European State of the Climate report for last year. More energy in Europe was generated from renewables than from fossil fuels for the second year running.

The latest five-year averages show that temperatur­es in Europe are now running 2.3 degrees Celsius (4.1 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels, compared to 1.3 degrees Celsius higher globally, the report says—just shy of the targets under the 2015 Paris climate accord to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

“Europe saw yet another year of increasing temperatur­es and intensifyi­ng climate extremes— including heat stress with record temperatur­es, wildfires, heat waves, glacier ice loss and lack of snowfall,” said Elisabeth Hamdouch, the deputy head of

unit for Copernicus at the EU’S executive commission.

The report serves up a continenta­l complement for WMO’S flagship state of the global climate report, which has been published annually for three decades, and this year came with a “red alert” warning that the world isn’t doing enough to fight the consequenc­es of global warming.

Copernicus has reported that March marked the 10th straight month of record monthly temperatur­es. The average sea-surface temperatur­e for the ocean across Europe hit its highest annual level in 2023, the Europe report said.

The European report focuses this year on the impact of high temperatur­es on human health, noting that deaths related to heat have risen across the continent. It said more than 150 lives were lost directly last year in connection with storms, floods and wildfires.

The cost of weather- and climate-related economic losses in 2023 were estimated at more than 13.4 billion euros (about $14.3 billion).

“Hundreds of thousands of people were affected by extreme climate events in 2023, which have been responsibl­e for large losses at continenta­l level, estimated to be at least in the tens of billions of euros,” said Copernicus director Carlo Buontempo.

Extreme weather fanned heat waves, wildfires, droughts and flooding, the report said. High temperatur­es have contribute­d to a loss of glacier ice on the continent, including in the Alps— which have lost about 10 percent of their remaining glacier ice over the last two years.

Still, the report’s authors pointed to some exceptions, such as how temperatur­es were below average in Scandinavi­a and Iceland even if the mercury was higher than average across much of the continent as a whole.

 ?? AP/THANASSIS STAVRAKIS ?? BURNT trees and a car after a fire in Mandra, west of Athens, on Wednesday, July 19, 2023. Europe is the fastest-warming continent and its temperatur­es are rising at roughly twice the global average, two top climate monitoring organizati­ons reported Monday, April 22, 2024, warning of the consequenc­es for human health, glacier melt and economic activity.
AP/THANASSIS STAVRAKIS BURNT trees and a car after a fire in Mandra, west of Athens, on Wednesday, July 19, 2023. Europe is the fastest-warming continent and its temperatur­es are rising at roughly twice the global average, two top climate monitoring organizati­ons reported Monday, April 22, 2024, warning of the consequenc­es for human health, glacier melt and economic activity.

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