Zürcher Nachrichten - March saw 10th straight month of record global heat: monitor

EUR -
AED 4.253793
AFN 73.538311
ALL 96.012872
AMD 436.811565
ANG 2.073056
AOA 1061.957069
ARS 1594.404251
AUD 1.662949
AWG 2.087146
AZN 1.967907
BAM 1.952753
BBD 2.333738
BDT 142.199929
BGN 1.979513
BHD 0.437188
BIF 3439.490881
BMD 1.158078
BND 1.481252
BOB 8.006885
BRL 6.049219
BSD 1.158682
BTN 108.992733
BWP 15.791107
BYN 3.434259
BYR 22698.323661
BZD 2.330614
CAD 1.598929
CDF 2640.417213
CHF 0.916078
CLF 0.026914
CLP 1062.697695
CNY 7.992473
CNH 7.991953
COP 4287.771244
CRC 538.780131
CUC 1.158078
CUP 30.68906
CVE 110.741159
CZK 24.465541
DJF 205.813906
DKK 7.473348
DOP 69.918955
DZD 153.548932
EGP 60.832783
ERN 17.371166
ETB 182.173115
FJD 2.601013
FKP 0.865346
GBP 0.865298
GEL 3.120975
GGP 0.865346
GHS 12.680718
GIP 0.865346
GMD 85.116128
GNF 10167.922589
GTQ 8.86839
GYD 242.440496
HKD 9.053331
HNL 30.712537
HRK 7.537113
HTG 151.948123
HUF 386.461924
IDR 19514.76796
ILS 3.608397
IMP 0.865346
INR 108.902099
IQD 1517.081837
IRR 1520729.78105
ISK 143.208453
JEP 0.865346
JMD 182.519893
JOD 0.821096
JPY 184.418109
KES 150.260853
KGS 101.272974
KHR 4647.365541
KMF 494.499603
KPW 1042.286578
KRW 1737.441285
KWD 0.354974
KYD 0.965639
KZT 559.089227
LAK 24997.108058
LBP 103705.861729
LKR 364.424437
LRD 212.681294
LSL 19.618142
LTL 3.419502
LVL 0.70051
LYD 7.382801
MAD 10.801971
MDL 20.261343
MGA 4829.183971
MKD 61.657391
MMK 2432.15733
MNT 4133.721531
MOP 9.331543
MRU 46.473894
MUR 53.816164
MVR 17.892624
MWK 2011.581663
MXN 20.530511
MYR 4.591194
MZN 74.003039
NAD 19.60631
NGN 1605.454434
NIO 42.524631
NOK 11.217755
NPR 174.391379
NZD 1.989022
OMR 0.445279
PAB 1.158747
PEN 4.007533
PGK 4.990736
PHP 69.517674
PKR 323.162008
PLN 4.275217
PYG 7539.299492
QAR 4.220007
RON 5.095663
RSD 117.432579
RUB 93.801927
RWF 1690.793497
SAR 4.344623
SBD 9.313304
SCR 17.058428
SDG 696.005112
SEK 10.807494
SGD 1.482044
SHP 0.868858
SLE 28.43085
SLL 24284.32366
SOS 661.262482
SRD 43.243198
STD 23969.871023
STN 24.782864
SVC 10.139308
SYP 128.486707
SZL 19.569633
THB 37.787798
TJS 11.095647
TMT 4.053272
TND 3.401852
TOP 2.788373
TRY 51.370242
TTD 7.87901
TWD 36.94728
TZS 2976.328133
UAH 50.873868
UGX 4287.420243
USD 1.158078
UYU 46.90781
UZS 14128.548223
VES 535.136558
VND 30515.348392
VUV 138.399637
WST 3.17105
XAF 654.963162
XAG 0.015959
XAU 0.000254
XCD 3.129763
XCG 2.088422
XDR 0.81354
XOF 652.57625
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.375769
ZAR 19.58907
ZMK 10424.085847
ZMW 21.698169
ZWL 372.900559
  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.91

    +0.17%

  • JRI

    0.2400

    12.1

    +1.98%

  • RIO

    0.7700

    87.54

    +0.88%

  • BCC

    1.0800

    74.65

    +1.45%

  • BCE

    -0.3400

    25.49

    -1.33%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.68

    +0.22%

  • NGG

    1.9600

    84.29

    +2.33%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    15.9

    +1.89%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.72

    +0.41%

  • GSK

    1.7500

    54.7

    +3.2%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    32.47

    +0.03%

  • BP

    0.6200

    45.41

    +1.37%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    58.45

    +1.18%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    187.14

    +0.73%

March saw 10th straight month of record global heat: monitor
March saw 10th straight month of record global heat: monitor / Photo: Nhac NGUYEN - AFP

March saw 10th straight month of record global heat: monitor

Europe's climate monitor said Tuesday that March was the hottest on record and the tenth straight month of historic heat, with sea surface temperatures also hitting a "shocking" new high.

Text size:

It is the latest red flag in a year already marked by climate extremes and rising greenhouse gas emissions, spurring fresh calls for more rapid action to limit global warming.

- Rolling records -

Every month since June 2023 has beaten its own "hottest ever" tag -- and March 2024 was no exception.

The EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) said that March globally was 1.68 degrees Celsius hotter than an average March between the years 1850-1900, the reference period for the pre-industrial era.

The March record was only broken by 0.1C but it is the broader trend that was more alarming, said Samantha Burgess, deputy director of C3S.

Huge swathes of the planet endured above-average temperatures in March, from parts of Africa to Greenland, South America and Antarctica.

- 'Borrowed time' -

It was not only the tenth consecutive month to break its own heat record, but capped the hottest 12-month period on the books -- 1.58C above pre-industrial averages.

This doesn't mean the 1.5C warming limit agreed by world leaders in Paris in 2015 has been breached -- that is measured in decades, not individual years.

Nonetheless "the reality is that we're extraordinarily close, and already on borrowed time," Burgess told AFP.

The UN's IPCC climate panel has warned that the world will likely crash through 1.5C in the early 2030s.

- 'Incredibly unusual' -

The story at sea was no less "shocking", Burgess said, with a new record for global ocean surface temperature set in February eclipsed once again in March.

"That's incredibly unusual," she said.

Oceans cover 70 percent of the planet and have kept the Earth's surface liveable by absorbing 90 percent of the excess heat produced by the carbon pollution from human activity since the dawn of the industrial age.

- More heat, more rain -

Hotter oceans mean more moisture in the atmosphere -- scientists say the air can generally hold around seven percent more water vapour for every 1C of temperature rise.

This leads to increasingly erratic weather, like fierce winds and powerful rain.

Russia is reeling from some of its worst flooding in decades while parts of Australia, Brazil and France experienced an exceptionally wet March.

"We know the warmer our global atmosphere is, the more extreme events we'll have, the worse they will be, the more intense they will be," Burgess told AFP.

- Heat on the horizon -

Copernicus said the cyclical El Nino climate pattern, which warms the sea surface in the Pacific Ocean, leading to hotter weather globally, continued to weaken in March.

But its "warming effect" alone did not explain the dramatic spikes witnessed this past year and projections for the coming months still indicated above-average temperatures, Burgess said.

Could this mean more records shattered this year?

"Whilst we continue to see so much heat in the surface ocean -- so in the sea surface temperatures -- I think it's highly likely," Burgess said.

- Bigger question -

Copernicus records go back to 1940 but other sources of climate data such as ice cores, tree rings and coral skeletons allow scientists to expand their conclusions using evidence from much deeper in the past.

"We know that the period that we're living in right now is likely to be the warmest that it's been for the last 100,000 years," Burgess said.

As climate records tumble, scientists are debating whether the extreme heat seen this past year was within the bounds of what was forecast -- or was something more uncharted.

"Is it a phase change? Is the climate system broken? We don't really understand yet why we have this additional heat in 23/24. We can explain most of it, but not all of it," Burgess said.

What had transpired was "within the envelope" of scientific forecasts "but it was the very outer edge of the envelope, rather than the mean or the median where you'd expect it to fall", she added.

- Up and up -

Humanity, meanwhile, continues to pump ever-more planet-heating emissions into the atmosphere even as scientists say they need to fall by almost half this decade to keep the Paris goals within reach.

Levels of carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide -- the three main human-caused greenhouse gases -- rose for another year in 2023, scientists from the US-based National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said on Friday.

"Until we get to net zero, we will continue to see temperatures rise," Burgess said.

O.Pereira--NZN