The
northern hemisphere summer of 2023 has been the hottest since
records began, with prolonged heatwaves in North America and
southern Europe causing catastrophic wildfires and spikes in
mortality rates. July was the hottest month ever recorded, while
average August temperatures were also 1.5 Celsius higher than
pre-industrial levels.
A study by Climate Central, a U.S.-based research group, looked
at temperatures in 180 countries and 22 territories and found
that 98% of the world's population were exposed to higher
temperatures made at least twice more likely by carbon dioxide
pollution.
"Virtually no one on Earth escaped the influence of global
warming during the past three months," said Andrew Pershing,
Climate Central's vice president for science.
"In every country we could analyse, including the southern
hemisphere, where this is the coolest time of year, we saw
temperatures that would be difficult - and in some cases nearly
impossible - without human-caused climate change," he said.
Climate Central assesses whether heat events are made more
likely as a result of climate change by comparing observed
temperatures with those generated by models that remove the
influence of greenhouse gas emissions.
It said as many as 6.2 billion people experienced at least one
day of average temperatures that were at least five times more
likely as a result of climate change, the maximum value in
Climate Central's Climate Shift Index.
The heatwaves in North America and southern Europe would have
been impossible without climate change, said Friederike Otto, a
climate scientist at the Grantham Institute for Climate Change
and the Environment.
"We have looked at isolated heatwaves," she said. "They have not
been made five times more likely. They have been made infinitely
more likely because they would not have occurred without climate
change."
(Reporting by David Stanway in Singapore and Ali Withers in
Copenhagen. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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