USA TODAY International Edition

Like June, July sears its mark in record book

Last month was hottest in history, scientists say

- Doyle Rice

July was the Earth’s hottest month on record, federal scientists announced Thursday.

The global temperatur­e for July was 62.13 degrees Fahrenheit, which is 1.71 degrees higher than the average for the 20th century, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion said. It beat the previous record warm month, which was July 2016. Records date back to 1880. July’s heat came on the heels of the hottest June on record.

“I anticipate­d that 2019 was going to contend for one of the warmest years on record because of climate change

Last month marked the 43rd consecutiv­e July and the 415th consecutiv­e month with temperatur­es above the 20th- century average.

National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion

and a weak El Niño signal,” said Marshall Shepherd, director of the atmospheri­c sciences program at the University of Georgia. “July affirms that this year, like many of the past two decades, is operating within a new normal climate.”

For the year to date, 2019 is tied with 2017 as the second- warmest year on record. It’s virtually certain 2019 will be one of the five warmest years on record, said NOAA climate scientist Deke Arndt.

Last month marked the 43rd consecutiv­e July and the 415th consecutiv­e month with temperatur­es above the 20th- century average, NOAA said.

One of the most notable weather events around the globe in July was the record- shattering heat wave that spread across Europe late in the month, according to AccuWeathe­r.

France, Belgium, Germany, Netherland­s and the United Kingdom all set all- time high temperatur­e records. That includes temperatur­es of 101.7 degrees in Cambridge, England, and 108.7 degrees in Paris.

On the other side of the Northern Hemisphere, Alaska baked under extreme heat, AccuWeathe­r said. On July 4, Anchorage hit the 90- degree mark for the first time in the city’s history.

The heat helped fuel huge wildfires in Arctic locations such as Alaska, Siberia and Greenland.

Other climate monitoring groups, including Berkeley Earth and the Copernicus Climate Change Service, said July was the warmest month on record.

NASA joined the consensus that July 2019 was the warmest July on record, but it reported that July tied with August 2016 for the warmest month overall.

NASA uses slightly different methods to analyze global surface temperatur­es.

Human activities, principall­y the burning of fossil fuels and deforestat­ion, are causing the global average temperatur­e to increase at a dangerous rate, unpreceden­ted in human history, according to Climate Signals.

 ?? USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Daniel Huaracha wipes away sweat while paving a parking lot in Brown Deer, Wis., on July 15 during the hottest month on record dating back to 1880.
USA TODAY NETWORK Daniel Huaracha wipes away sweat while paving a parking lot in Brown Deer, Wis., on July 15 during the hottest month on record dating back to 1880.

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