monthly heat records have been shattered for the last 12 months in a row. as somebody who has been studying sort of with intimate knowledge the climate crisis all these years. what do you make of what s happening around the world these days? i mean, this is just a dizzying rate of change that we re experiencing right now. but in the near future 2020 3-year-old register as a normal year whereas in fact, if you look at those graphs, all you can see is a vertical line shooting upward from the very recent, warmest years on record. so really just a records smashing year in 2023 let me be very clear. again, the phase out, the fossil fuels is essential, and inevitable no amount of speed are scared tactics will change that let s hope it doesn t come to light while the head of
floods and droughts and the fires and the blizzards across the globe. taking thousands of lives, costing the us alone tens of billions winds of dollars. and as cnn s bill were reports for us now, this is expected to be a terrifying new baseline for the future of planet earth across the american heartland came a conga line devastating tornadoes deadly flooding from brazil to germany a drought that has millions rationing water in mexico city and temperatures close to 122 diabetes in india, enough to kill at least 33 poll workers on the same day in recent national elections all are snapshots from a planet overheated by human activity or monthly heat records have meant shattered for the last 12 months in a row.
Global Heatwave: April 2024 Was Too Hot To Handle! Global Heat Records Shattered As Mercury Continues To Soar timesnownews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from timesnownews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Off the Charts The Earth simply can't stop setting new heat records. Global surface temperatures have soared to yet another record, making March the tenth consecutive hottest month on record, The Guardian reports. Over the last 12 months alone, global temperatures have persistently been over 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, suggesting we're already in […]