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June 2023 is the hottest on record in the world.  Record average temperature «3B Meteo

June 2023 is the hottest on record in the world. Record average temperature «3B Meteo

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Weather, June 2023 warmest on record
Weather, June 2023 warmest on record

The beginning of June was the warmest on record. However, according to preliminary surveys, the entire month of June globally is the hottest in the historical series in the JRA-55 dataset. The thermal anomaly of +0.52°C during 1991-2020 exceeds the previous record of +0.32°C in June 2019 and +0.28°C in 2016 after the Super El Nino event. The last month of June below average is from 2008. This record is also confirmed in the ERA5 dataset; According to Copernicus, the mean temperature in this data set is +16.88°C which, although lower in absolute terms than that of JRA, beats the record of 16.80°C set in August 2016. It is likely So much so that even for individual countries, June 2023 is the hottest on record.

According to NCEP, the daily ground data average for July 3 of 17.01°C is a value that has never been recorded. in the data set since 1979 and possibly earlier. The previous figure was 16.90°C recorded on July 24, 2022 and August 13, 2016. It should be noted that this data will become official in the next few days. With a record heat in June, 2023 is set to be the hottest year on record.

Global mean temperature, climate analyzer source
Global mean temperature, climate analyzer source

June is also marked by intense heatwaves over Mexico and Texas, but also unprecedented fires in Canada, and fires so strong that the smoke has reached Europe and even Italy.

Also record heatwaves in the ocean, Particularly in the Atlantic where the type of restricted circulation and weak trade winds brought record values. These marine heat waves, with surface deviations of up to 5-6 degrees Celsius over the North Sea, in turn increased land temperatures to the record levels observed during the month.

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Sea ice in Antarctica continues to break records After hitting an all-time low for the summer. During the freeze, it hit a record low for the time of year, so much so that the re-freeze was a month behind schedule.

This global warming, which has various repercussions, is due to several factors. The underlying trend of global warming is primarily the warming of outdoor areas resulting from 3 consecutive years of La Niña combined with El Niño warming. El Nino also worked on the siege positions that characterized the month in the northern hemisphere.


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