Second-warmest November on record means that 2024 is likely to be
Earth's hottest year, report says
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[December 09, 2024]
By TAMMY WEBBER
Earth just experienced its second-warmest November on record — second
only to 2023 — making it all but certain that 2024 will end as the
hottest year ever measured, according to a report Monday by European
climate service Copernicus.
Last year was the hottest on record due to human-caused climate change
coupled with the effects of an El Nino. But after this summer registered
as the hottest on record — Phoenix sweltered through 113 consecutive
days with a high temperature of at least 100 degrees Fahrenheit (37.7
Celsius) — scientists were anticipating that 2024 would set a new annual
record as well.
In November, global temperatures averaged 14.10C (57.38F). Last year's
global average temperature was 14.98C (59F). Through November, this
year's average global temperature is 0.14C (32F) above the same period
last year.
Jennifer Francis, a climate scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research
Center in Cape Cod, who wasn't involved in the report, said the big
story about November is that “like 2023, it beat out previous Novembers
by a large margin.”
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This also likely will be the first calendar year in which the average
temperature was more than 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit)
above pre-industrial times, the report said. The 2015 Paris Agreement
said human-caused warming should be limited to 2 degrees Celsius (3.6
degrees Fahrenheit), and ideally below 1.5. In the following years, the
world's top scientist said limiting to 1.5 was crucial to stave off the
worst impacts of climate change, such as increasing destructive and
frequent extreme weather events. Scientists say the main cause of
climate change is the burning of fossil fuels like coal, oil and natural
gas.
That “does not mean that the Paris Agreement has been breached, but it
does mean ambitious climate action is more urgent than ever,” Copernicus
Deputy Director Samantha Burgess said in a news release.
Francis said the new records are “terrible news for people and
ecosystems.”
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People are silhouetted against the sky at sunset as they run in a
park, Nov. 12, 2024, in Shawnee, Kan. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel,
File)
 “The pace of warming is so fast that
plants and animals cannot adapt as they always have during previous
changes in the Earth’s climate. More species will go extinct, which
disrupts natural food webs they’re a part of. Agriculture will
suffer as pollinators decline and pests flourish,” she said, also
warning that coastal communities will be vulnerable to sea-level
rise.
Heat waves over the oceans and a loss of reflective
sea ice and snow cover probably contributed to the temperature
increase this year, experts said. Copernicus said the extent of
Antarctic sea ice in November was 10% below average, a record.
Oceans absorb about 90% of the heat trapped by greenhouse gases,
later releasing heat and water vapor back into the atmosphere.
Last year's record heat was caused partly by an El Nino — a
temporary natural warming of parts of the central Pacific that
alters weather worldwide.
But that ended earlier this year and a cooling effect that often
follows, called La Nina, failed to materialize, leaving the
scientific community “a little perplexed by what’s going on here ...
why temperatures are staying high,” said Jonathan Overpeck, a
climate scientist at the University of Michigan.
One explanation is that an El Nino releases more heat to the
atmosphere because of warmer ocean waters, then "we’re not getting
the cooling effect that often in decades gone by helps bring the
temperature back down,” Overpeck said. "So it does look like this
could be contributing to the acceleration of global warming.
But this year, he said, “is such a big jump following yet another
jump, and that’s a scary thing.”
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