Wednesday, 20 December 2017

November was the 395th consecutive month with temperatures above the 20th-century average and 2017 set to be the third warmest ever: NOAA

Photo NOAA
It has been an incredible year for major wildfires and hurricanes both blamed on climate change, in my part of the world, Holland, it has been a warm year but...It started raining in August and it hasn't stopped, well that's an exaggeration but it has been unusually wet for the last 5 months.
In the summer for the first time I can remember we had heatwaves in the US the UK and Europe simultaneously.
Incredible temperatures where recorded in Arizona and Southern California of 50 deg C, 122 deg F, too hot for commercial flights to land or take off.
NOAA has claimed in a new report that 2017 was the 3rd warmest year to date, (something drastic would have to happen around the world in December for it to drop down the table) and 5th warmest November on record
Arctic and Antarctic sea ice coverage remain at near-record lows, surprise surprise, however, no mention snowfalls atop an Alaskan mountain range has doubled since the start of the industrial age, evidence that climate change can trigger major increases in regional precipitation, according to research published in the journal Scientific Reports last Tuesday.

Below are the main highlights of NOAA's report.
December 18, 2017, with a warm start to the year and only one month remaining, the globe remains on track to go down as the third warmest year in the 138-year climate record.

Climate by the numbers
November 2017
The average global temperature in November 2017 was 1.35 degrees F above the 20th-century average of 55.2 degrees, according to scientists from NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information.
This average temperature tied 2016 as the fifth highest for November in the 1880-2017 record.
This marked the 41st consecutive November and the 395th consecutive month with temperatures above the 20th-century average.

Seasonal | September through November 2017
The end of November marks the end of the fall season for the Northern Hemisphere and spring for the Southern Hemisphere.
The average seasonal temperature for the globe was 1.35 degrees F above the 20th century average of 57.1 degrees F.
This was the fourth highest for September-November in the 1880-2017 record.

Year to date | January through November 2017
The year-to-date average temperature was 1.51 degrees F above the 20th-century average of 57.2 degrees.
This was the third warmest for this period on record.


Map: These are some of the noteworthy climate-related events that occurred around the world during November and the year to date. (NOAA NCEI) Other notable climate events and facts around the world last month included:

Near-record-low sea ice at the poles

The average Arctic sea ice coverage in November was 11.6 percent below the 1981-2010 average, the third smallest since records began in 1979.

Antarctic sea ice extent in November was 5.7 percent below average, the second smallest on record.

Warmer-than-average lands and oceans

The globally averaged land-surface temperature ranked as ninth warmest for the month of November, fifth warmest for the season (September – November) and second highest for the year to date (January to November).

The globally averaged sea-surface temperature ranked fourth warmest for November and the season, and third highest for the year to date.

South America and Asia led the continents in November, seasonal warmth rankings

South America and Asia had their 10th warmest November on record; Oceania, its 13th; Africa, its 19th; Europe, its 22nd; and North America, its 30th.

For the season, South America and Asia had their second warmest September-November on record; Africa, its fourth; North America, its fifth; Oceania, its sixth; and Europe, its seventh.

Full report here

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