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The planet continues to grow hotter

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Published: October 19, 2023

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It looks like 2023 will be the hottest year on record for the planet. | Getty Images

You may have seen an article or two about how September shattered the record for warmest month, after the warmest August on record. It looks like 2023 will be the hottest year on record for the planet. Let’s dig a bit deeper.

I am using data provided by the Copernicus Earth Observation Programme and Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) of the European Union, implemented by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, an independent intergovernmental organization and one of the providers of medium- to long-range weather forecasts in our monthly weather outlooks.

Globally, September had an average surface air temperature of 16.38 C, which was 0.93 C above the 1991-2020 average for September and 0.5 C above the temperature of the previous warmest September back in 2020.

Breaking any record by 0.5 C is huge when it is a city or country record; it is almost unheard of to break a global record by this much. Usually, these records are broken by a few 100ths to maybe a 10th of a degree.

According to C3S, September’s global temperature was the most unusually warm month of any year in its dataset, which goes back to 1940. The month as a whole was around 1.75 C warmer than the September average for the preindustrial reference period of 1850-1900.

August was also the warmest month on record globally, smashing the record by 1.25 C above the 20th century average. All the major reporting agencies (NOAA, NASA, Japan Meteorological Agency, Copernicus) reported similar global temperatures in August.

The global temperature for January-September 2023 was 0.52 C higher than the 1991-2020 average, and 0.05 C higher than the equivalent period in the warmest calendar year, which was 2016.

At the end of August, there was a 93 percent chance 2023 would be the warmest year on record and those odds have risen since then.

Hot September – The chart shows September global temperature anomalies compared to the 1991-2020 reference period starting in 1940. This September was extreme compared to all other years. | Source: Copernicus Earth Observation Programme/Copernicus Climate Change Service

Along with record-breaking surface air temperatures, the planet also saw record-warm ocean temperatures. With all that oceanic heat, and El Nino now becoming a strong event that may last through winter and into spring 2024, I would not be surprised if we continue to see more monthly global temperature records fall.

In Antarctica, it was becoming clear by May that sea ice extent was tracking far below previous daily lows in the satellite record.

By mid-July, the middle of its winter, ice extent stood at more than 2.6 million sq. kilometres below the 1981-2010 average. By the end of the winter in early September, the Antarctic ice extent reached an annual maximum of 16.96 million square km, 1.03 million below the previous record low set in 1986.

To put that area into perspective, it’s about the size of Ontario. Again, we usually do not see records broken by these large amounts. There is some discussion among scientists that the ice conditions around Antarctica may be heading into a new regime or increasing decline due to warming oceans.

At the North Pole, the summer minimum ice extent was reached Sept. 19, with an annual minimum of 4.93 million square km, the sixth lowest on record even after what was a rather lacklustre melt season. Looking at the amount of ice loss in September since accurate record-keeping began in 1979, there has been a loss of about 3.45 million sq. km of ice — the equivalent area of all four western provinces plus the Yukon.

Tie all that together and you start to understand how this piece of the global puzzle can impact the warming of the planet.

I don’t like to bring this stuff up but it is becoming our reality and we are going to have to adapt.

Daniel Bezte is a teacher by profession with a BA in geography, specializing in climatology, from the University of Winnipeg. He operates a computerized weather station near Birds Hill Park, Man. Contact him at dmgbezte@gmail.com.

About the author

Daniel Bezte

Daniel Bezte

Daniel Bezte is a teacher by profession with a BA in geography, specializing in climatology, from the University of Winnipeg. He operates a computerized weather station near Birds Hill Park, Manitoba.

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