It's official: May is now Earth's hottest on record. Our climate is changing, and quickly: the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration said May 2016 was the hottest month on earth because we started recording, often see temperatures much higher than might be expected in the Arctic.
"The exception to the new norm, said:" David · Carlson from the world climate research programme, shows the data processing.
Alaska recorded its warm spring "large scale", statistics show, although in Finland during the period May temperatures higher than they usually are 3-5 ° c at this time of the year. All in all, 20 observatories around the world interrupted May temperature history.
There's more: Australia record (above-average 1.86 ° c), the warmest autumn and lowest records in the snow and ice cover in the Arctic, only 12 million square kilometres (4.63 million square miles) of monthly. This is nearly 1.4 million square kilometers (537,000 square miles) below the long-term average measurements from 1981 to 2010.
You can check out the NASA data itself, but it makes trouble reading for those who worry about the impact of climate change on our planet. In other words, that is treaties, to try and combat the problem cannot be put in place soon.
"Weather conditions, which so far this year has given us much cause for alarm," said Carlson, pointed out that the weather is very warm El Niño phase only partly to blame. "Rapid change is of particular concern in the Arctic. What will happen in the Arctic and the rest of the world. Issue is the rate of change continues to? Will it accelerate it? We all is uncharted territory.
Perhaps the only consolation is that scientists have been improving the quality of the data they used to measure weather-and better tools in the world, we can understand it better, we can recognize hazards to human activities.
Meteorologists said increased concentrations caused by human emissions of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has gotten worse this year by 2016 and the El Niño phenomenon.
From United Kingdom, Richard Betts of the University of Exeter said: "because of human emissions in 1997/98 is 25% is greater than the last big El Nino phenomenon, this has increased the record rise in CO2 this year".
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration data
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Bates and his colleagues in the United Kingdom Meteorological Office, writing an essay has been published in the journal nature on climate change.
Oh, and April 2016 is the hottest recorded April too, in case you are wondering. From the looks of it, 2016 is expected to be the hottest of the year, we have already seen, we begin to correct measurement of temperature, in the 1950 of the 20th century, and by a long distance.
There is not really any way of sugar-coated statistics, but rather than a message of despair, let us use it as a reminder that we all have differences in addressing climate change. Involved, guys!