62.92 F, Earth warmed to the highest temperature ever recorded by human-made instruments, most likely the hottest in 125,000 years, 3 days in a row

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Earth reaches hottest day ever recorded 3 days in a row

Even higher temperatures are expected in July and August as El Niño strengthens.

For three days in a row, the planet reached its hottest day ever recorded as regions all over the world endure dangerous heat.

Earth warmed to the highest temperature ever recorded by human-made instruments when the average global temperature reached 17.18 degrees Celsius, or 62.92 degrees Fahrenheit, on Tuesday, as millions of Americans celebrated the Fourth of July, data from the U.S. National Centers for Environmental Prediction shows.

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Visitors and tourists to the World War II Memorial seek relief from the hot weather in the memorial's fountain, July 3, 2023, in Washington, D.C.

On Wednesday, the record was tied as global temperatures again reached 17.18 degrees Celsius, according to the NCEP.

The record was first set on Monday, when average global temperatures measured at 16.2 degrees Celsius, or 61.16 degrees Fahrenheit, but it only took one day to surpass that temperature.

The heat blanketing much of Earth has been driven by El Niño in combination with the greenhouse gas emissions responsible for global warming, researchers say.

Those conditions may prompt even hotter temperatures over the next six weeks, Robert Rohde, a physicist and lead scientist at Berkeley Earth, a non-profit environmental data analysis group, tweeted on Wednesday.

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Although the data only exists after 1979, Tuesday's temperatures likely represent the record for long before global temperatures began to be recorded, Rhode said.

"Global warming is leading us into an unfamiliar world," Rhode tweeted.

The record was broken at the same time that some regions in the southern U.S are facing a weeks-long heat wave with dangerous temperatures, as well as intense heat domes occurring elsewhere in the world in places like China and North Africa.

Earth had the warmest June on record for air temperature and for sea surface temperature, but July and August could prove to be even hotter as El Niño continues to strengthen, Brian Brettschneider, a climate scientist based in Anchorage, Alaska, wrote on Twitter.

June global temperature has been climbing since 1980, Brettschneider said.



Heat is the number-one weather-related killer in the world, with more than 600 people dying from heat-related illnesses every year in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

At least 13 people have died from heat-related illness in Texas so far this summer.


 
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Oh well they keep thinkin they could BLOCK the Sun.. LOL....




seems like the Sun PUNCHES BACK....... :bravo:
 
These jokers already got their secret bunkers prepped up and ready when SHTF.

Billionaire bunkers: How the world’s wealthiest are paying to escape reality​


The ultra-wealthy are buying high-end bunkers with resort-like amenities where they can live in luxury while the world outside collapses.



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Phoenix hospitals see growing number of patients with heat-related illness

With millions of people under heat alerts in the U.S., health officials in the hottest states have grown increasingly wary of heat-related illnesses. CBS News' Jonathan Vigliotti reports on how doctors are treating heat stroke patients in Arizona.

 

Phoenix hospitals see growing number of patients with heat-related illness

With millions of people under heat alerts in the U.S., health officials in the hottest states have grown increasingly wary of heat-related illnesses. CBS News' Jonathan Vigliotti reports on how doctors are treating heat stroke patients in Arizona.





 

Some July Heat: ‘Virtually Impossible’ Without Climate Change, Analysis Finds

The latest study from World Weather Attribution scientists predicts that extreme heat waves will return more frequently.

Some of the extreme temperatures recorded in the Southwestern United States, southern Europe and northern Mexico at the beginning of the month would have been “virtually impossible” without the influence of human-caused climate change, according to research made public Tuesday.
During the first half of July hundreds of millions of people in North America, Europe and Asia sweltered under intense heat waves. A heat wave in China was made 50 times as likely by climate change, the researchers said.
World Weather Attribution, an international group of scientists who measure how much climate change influences extreme weather events, focused on the worst heat so far during the northern hemisphere summer. In the United States, temperatures in Phoenix have reached 110 degrees Fahrenheit, roughly 43 Celsius, or higher for more than 20 days in a row. Many places in southern Europe are experiencing record-breaking, triple-digit temperatures. A remote township in Xinjiang, China, hit 126 degrees, breaking the national record.
“Without climate change, we wouldn’t see this at all,” said Friederike Otto, a senior lecturer in climate science at Imperial College London and co-founder of World Weather Attribution. “Or it would be so rare that it basically would not be happening.”

But in a climate changed by fossil fuel emissions, heat waves of this magnitude “are not rare events,” she said.

Before the industrial revolution, the North American and European heat waves were virtually impossible, according to the researchers’ statistical analysis. China’s heat wave would only have happened about once every 250 years.

If the composition of the atmosphere remained at today’s levels, the United States and Mexico could expect heat waves like the one this July about once every 15 years. In southern Europe, there would be a 1 in 10 chance each year of a similar event. In China there’s a 1 in 5 chance each year of a reoccurrence.


But because humans are continuing to burn fossil fuels and put extra greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, the odds will continue to tip in extreme heat’s favor: even if we stop, temperatures will not cool again, they will just stop rising.

“The heat waves we are seeing now, we definitely need to live with,” Dr. Otto said.

As temperatures have climbed in Europe, Greece has faced a rash of wildfires that have forced the largest evacuations in the country’s history. The blistering heat has made firefighting efforts more challenging, officials said. More frequent and more intense wildfires in the Mediterranean can also be linked to climate change, according to a recent study.
“We have rising risks from heat,” said Julie Arrighi, director of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Climate Centre and one of the researchers with World Weather Attribution. “It is deadly.” She emphasized the need to adapt cities and critical infrastructure to extreme heat, but also to reduce greenhouse gas emissions at the same time.
Many local and national governments, especially in Europe, have created heat action plans that include things like public cooling centers, and advance warning and coordination between social services and hospitals.
But even where these programs exist they are imperfect, and for now, the human cost of extreme temperatures remains high. The death toll from this month’s heat won’t be clear for some time, but more than 100 people have already died this summer in Mexico of heat-related causes, according to the national health secretary. Last summer, approximately 61,000 people died across Europe because of heat waves, according to another recent study.

 
The fucking politicians isn't doing a damn thing about climate control. The thing that im worried about is how is different infrastructures. Is going to handle all this extended heat over time.

I Was watching theyoungturks. And they did a story, in Arizona, the damn street lights were melting and malfunctioning.

Then I got to thinking about different electronics such as cars and airplanes. Is they built to withstand such high ass heat.
 
AC ain't been off since May as usual. Made it through the summer of 88. Seemed like every fucking day was 90 something. That shit was like hell on earth and my parents would only run the AC for certain hours. Vowed never to live life like that. :angry:


Don't remind me of '88,I was only 8 years old and I thought I was gonna die that summer....



:lol2: :lol2: :lol2:
 
The fucking politicians isn't doing a damn thing about climate control. The thing that im worried about is how is different infrastructures. Is going to handle all this extended heat over time.

I Was watching theyoungturks. And they did a story, in Arizona, the damn street lights were melting and malfunctioning.

Then I got to thinking about different electronics such as cars and airplanes. Is they built to withstand such high ass heat.
Pavement and sidewalks were 167-180 degrees in the sun.... water boils at 212 degrees.... they said that anyone who fell down were getting third degree burns on exposed skin in Phoenix. No dog walking in the day :smh:

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I wonder how stupid we look as a species to aliens. The elites are literally making life unfit for humanity while the masses essentially sitting back and letting it happen...as a species, are we that different from sheep when it comes to big global matters?...any way, climate change is here and its only gonna get worse
 
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