Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Various heat records have been broken, [1] with July being the hottest month ever recorded. [2] Scientists have attributed the heat waves to man-made climate change. [1] [2] Another cause is the El Niño phenomena which began to develop in 2023. [3] However, recent findings show that climate change is exacerbating the strength of El Niño. [4]
‘Climate breakdown has begun,’ says United Nations chief as August temperatures smash records again Earth experienced ‘hottest summer on record’ in 2023, UN says Skip to main content
With four months of the year remaining, 2023 currently ranks as the second warmest on record, according to Copernicus, only 0.01 degrees Celsius below 2016, which is currently the warmest year on ...
The summer heat wave resulted in Texas experiencing its second hottest summer on record in 2023, with the full year being its hottest on record. Over 300 people died from heat in Texas in 2023, the most since the state began tracking such deaths in 1989.
2023 is on track to be the hottest year in human history. The announcement, from European scientists on Thursday, was hardly suprising after record-breaking heat this summer in the northern ...
2023's June-July-August season was the warmest on record globally by a large margin, as El Niño conditions continued to develop. [16] September 2023 was the warmest September on record globally, with an average surface air temperature 0.5 °C above the temperature of the previous warmest September (2020). [17]
The Earth had its hottest year on record in 2023, according to preliminary data from the US government and other climate research bodies. Scientists across the world have been warning for months ...
Climate records tumbled "like dominoes" in 2023, with temperatures far above any recorded level.