WASHINGTON (AP) — Earth dialed the heat up in June, smashing
warm temperature records for both the month and the first half of the year.
Off-the-charts heat is "getting to be a monthly
thing," said Jessica Blunden, a climate scientist for the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration. June was the fourth month of 2015 that set a
record, she said.
"There is almost no way that 2015 isn't going to be the
warmest on record," she added.
NOAA calculated that the world's average temperature in June
hit 61.48 degrees Fahrenheit (16.33 Celsius), breaking the old record set last
year by 0.22 degrees (.12 degrees Celsius). Usually temperature records are
broken by one or two one-hundredths of a degree, not nearly a quarter of a
degree, Blunden said.
And the picture is even more dramatic when the half-year is
considered.
The first six months of 2015 were one-sixth of a degree
warmer than the old record, set in 2010, averaging 57.83 degrees (14.35
Celsius).
The old record for the first half of the year was set in
2010, the last time there was an El Nino — a warming of the central Pacific
Ocean that changes weather worldwide. But in 2010, the El Nino petered out.
This year, forecasters are predicting this El Nino will get stronger, not
weaker.
"If that happens, it's just going to go off the
charts," Blunden said.
June was warm nearly all over the world, with exceptional
heat in Spain, Austria, parts of Asia, Australia and South America. Southern
Pakistan had a June heat wave that killed more than 1,200 people — which,
according to an international database, would be the eighth deadliest in the
world since 1900. In May, a heat wave in India claimed more than 2,000 lives
and ranked as the fifth deadliest on record.
May and March also broke monthly heat records, which go back
136 years. Initially NOAA figured February 2015 was only the second hottest
February on record, but new data came in that made it too the hottest, Blunden
said. Earth has broken monthly heat records 25 times since the year 2000, but
hasn't broken a monthly cold record since 1916.
"This is what anthropogenic global warming looks like,
just hotter and hotter," said Jonathan Overpeck, co-director of the
Institute of the Environment at the University of Arizona.
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