(Paris) 2023 continues its race to the top of the thermometer: the month of October was the hottest ever recorded in the world, continuing a succession of monthly records started in June, the European Observatory Copernicus announced on Wednesday, for which 2023 will “almost certainly” surpass the 2016 annual record.
These new measures, which result in droughts synonymous with famines, devastating fires or reinforced hurricanes, fuel the warnings of scientists, which will be the background of the 28e United Nations climate conference in Dubai (November 30-December 12).
“We can say with near certainty that 2023 will be the hottest year on record” and “the feeling of urgently needing to take ambitious climate action in the run-up to COP28 has never been stronger “, said Samantha Burgess, deputy head of Copernicus’ climate change department (C3S), in a statement.
The past month, with an average of 15.38°C on the globe’s surface, exceeds the previous record of October 2019 by 0.4°C, according to Copernicus. The anomaly is “exceptional” for global temperatures.
October 2023 is “1.7°C warmer than the average October over the period 1850-1900”, before the effect of humanity’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, adds the observatory.
Since January, the average temperature has been the hottest ever measured over the first ten months of the year: 1.43°C above the climate of the 1850s-1900s, according to the European observatory.
” State of siege “
More than ever, 2023 is approaching the emblematic limit (+1.5°C) of the Paris Agreement over an entire year, for which COP28 must establish the first official assessment and, if possible, the first corrective measure.
The World Meteorological Organization estimated in the spring that this bar would be crossed for the first time in 12 months over the next five years.
However, it will be necessary to measure 1.5°C on average over several years to consider the threshold reached from a climatic point of view. The IPCC, which brings together climate experts mandated by the United Nations, predicts that it will be with a 50% chance from the years 2030-2035, taking into account the rate of GHG emissions, mainly from fossil fuels.
The current climate is considered warmer by about 1.2°C compared to 1850-1900.
Copernicus measurements go back as far as 1940, but can be compared to the climates of past millennia, established using tree rings or ice cores. These data suggest that current temperatures are likely the warmest in over 100,000 years.
“Life on planet Earth is under siege,” a group of eminent scientists warned at the end of October in an alarming report, noting the “minimal progress” of humans in reducing their CO emissions.2.
Lower El Niño
As in 2016, the current annual heat record, El Niño will add to the effects of climate change in 2023 to cause the thermometer to rise. This cyclical phenomenon over the Pacific generally peaks around Christmas time.
It continues to develop “although the anomalies remain lower than those reached at this time of year” in 1997 and 2015, when El Niño was historically strong, estimates Copernicus.
On different continents, in October, drought hit regions of the United States and Mexico. While large areas of the planet experienced wetter than normal conditions, often linked to storms and cyclones.
Overheating of the oceans plays a major role in these records.
Sea surface temperatures have broken records every month since April, including October with an average of 20.79°C.
This increase has the effect of increasing the intensity of storms, carrying more evaporated water. And accelerate the melting of the floating ice shelves of Greenland and Antarctica, crucial for retaining fresh water from glaciers and preventing massive sea level rise.
The Antarctic sea ice remains for the sixth month in a row at a record low level for the season, 11% below the average, according to the C3S. In the Arctic, in the north, October is the 7the monthly minimum, 12% below average.