
This year is
"virtually certain" to be the warmest in 125,000 years, European
Union scientists said on Wednesday, after data showed last month was the
world's hottest October in that period.
Last month smashed
through the previous October temperature record, from 2019, by a massive
margin, the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) said.
"The record was
broken by 0.4 degrees Celsius, which is a huge margin," said C3S Deputy
Director Samantha Burgess, who described the October temperature anomaly as
"very extreme".
The heat is a result of
continued greenhouse gas emissions from human activity, combined with the
emergence this year of the El Nino weather pattern, which warms the surface
waters in the eastern Pacific Ocean.
Globally, the average
surface air temperature in October was 1.7 degrees Celsius warmer than the same
month in 1850-1900, which Copernicus defines as the pre-industrial period.
The record-breaking
October means 2023 is now "virtually certain" to be the warmest year
recorded, C3S said in a statement. The previous record was 2016 - another El
Nino year.
Copernicus' dataset
goes back to 1940. "When we combine our data with the IPCC, then we can
say that this is the warmest year for the last 125,000 years," Burgess
said.
The longer-term data
from U.N. climate science panel IPCC includes readings from sources such as ice
cores, tree rings and coral deposits.
The only other time
before October a month breached the temperature
"September really,
really surprised us. So after last month, it's hard to determine whether we're in
a new climate state. But now records keep tumbling and they're surprising me
less than they did a month ago," Burgess said.
Michael Mann, a climate
scientist at University of Pennsylvania, said: "Most El Nino years are now
record-breakers, because the extra global warmth of El Nino adds to the steady
ramp of human-caused warming."
Climate change is
fuelling increasingly destructive extremes. This year, that included floods
that killed thousands of people in Libya, severe heatwaves in South America,
and Canada's worst wildfire season on record.
"We must not let
the devastating floods, wildfires, storms, and heatwaves seen this year become
the new normal," said Piers Forster, climate scientist at University of
Leeds.
"By rapidly
reducing greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade, we can halve the rate
of warming," he added.
Despite countries
setting increasingly ambitious targets to gradually cut emissions, so far that
has not happened. Global CO2 emissions hit a record high in 2022.