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Global temperatures hit record highs; “if there are no changes, we will fry”

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Global temperatures hit record highs; “if there are no changes, we will fry”

Global temperature records record heat; If there are no changes, we will fry

Ap

The newspaper La Jornada
Thursday, July 25, 2024, p. 28

Brussels. Monday was the hottest day on record, breaking the record set the day before, as countries around the world, from Japan and Bolivia to the United States, are still experiencing high temperatures, according to the European climate change agency.

Provisional satellite data released by Copernicus early on Wednesday showed Monday broke the previous day’s record by 0.06 degrees Celsius.

Climate scientists say the world is as hot as it was 125,000 years ago because of man-made climate change. While they cannot say for sure that Monday was the hottest day in that period, average temperatures this high have not been seen since humans developed agriculture.

The rise in temperatures in recent decades is in line with what climatologists predicted would happen if fossil fuels continued to be burned at an ever-increasing rate.

We are in a time when weather and climate records are often beyond our tolerance levels, resulting in insurmountable loss of life and livelihoods.said Roxy Mathew Koll, a scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology.

Preliminary Copernicus data show that the average global temperature on Monday was 17.15 degrees Celsius. Beyond this week’s record, the previous record was from last year. Until then, the hottest day on record had been in 2016, with an average temperature of 16.8 degrees Celsius.

Although 2024 has been extremely hot, pushing temperatures to new highs on Sunday, it was a warmer-than-usual Antarctic winter, according to Copernicus. The same was happening in the region last year, when the record was reached in early July.

Copernicus records go back to 1940, but other global measurements by the U.S. and U.K. governments date back to 1880. Many scientists, taking that data into account along with tree rings and ice cores, say last year’s highs were the warmest on the planet in about 120,000 years. Now, the first six months of 2024 have matched them.

Without climate change, scientists say records for extreme temperatures would not be broken as frequently as in recent years.

Christiana Figueres, former head of the United Nations climate negotiations, noted that We will all burn and fry if the world does not change course immediately.

One third of the world’s electricity can be produced from solar and wind power alone, but specific national policies need to allow for that transformation.he noted.

Scientists said it was extraordinary that such warm days have now occurred in two consecutive years, especially when the natural warming caused by the phenomenon The boy in the central Pacific Ocean ended earlier this year. This is yet another example of how much the Earth’s climate has warmed.said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles.