According to data from the EU climate converter Copernicus, the hottest march in Europe has been since the start of admission last month. The average temperature on the continent was 6.03 degrees and therefore 2.41 degrees above the average of the comparison period from 1991 to 2020.
Worldwide, according to Copernicus, it was the second heat that has been measured the most so far. Moreover, the lowest expansion of the Arctic Sea was ever measured in a march.
Hardly a target of 1.5 degrees
According to the service, it was also the 20 months in the past 21 months, in which the global average temperature was more than 1.5 degrees above the pre -industrial level. The international goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees if possible compared to pre -industrial times is hardly accessible. The year 2024 has already torn the 1.5 degrees limit. The goal is only officially a mistake after a few years of surpassing.
Data range by 1950
The Copernicus Climate Converter of the European Union regularly publishes data on the temperature on the earth’s surface, the sea ice blanket and precipitation. The findings are based on analyzes generated by the computer, in the billions of measurements of satellites, ships, planes and weather stations around the world. The data used go back to 1950, sometimes earlier data is also available.
Source: Krone

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