Hottest Year on Record: Urgent Climate Action Is Needed for 7.3 Billion People

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Joaquim Cardoso MSc.


Chief Research and Strategy Officer (CRSO),
Chief Editor and Senior Advisor

November 10, 2023

What is the message?

The past 12 months have marked the hottest on record, with 7.3 billion people worldwide experiencing temperatures heavily influenced by global warming.

Human-induced climate change, particularly from fossil fuel emissions, is identified as the primary driver behind the unprecedented warming.

Urgent action is emphasized to mitigate the impacts and protect human rights in the face of escalating climate-related challenges.

A firefighter takes a water break while combatting a wildfire during an excessive heat warning in Texas.
Extreme-heat events affected places including Texas in the past year. Credit: Brandon Bell/Getty

What are the key points?

Record-Breaking Temperatures:

The article reports that the past 12 months have seen the highest global temperatures on record, with 7.3 billion people experiencing temperatures strongly influenced by climate change.

Human-Induced Climate Change:

The majority of the observed warming, about 1.28 ºC, is attributed to human-induced climate change, with natural variations playing a smaller role.

Methodology and Measurement:

Scientists used the Climate Shift Index (CSI) to measure the impact of climate change on daily temperatures. A positive CSI value indicates the likelihood of climate change influencing daily temperatures.

Geographical Impact:

Tropical regions, including South America, Africa, and the Malay archipelago, experienced the most days with temperatures strongly influenced by climate change. Jamaica, Guatemala, and Rwanda were cited as places where global warming had a significant impact on daily temperatures.

City Impact:

The study evaluated 700 cities with populations of at least 1 million, finding that 156 cities in 37 countries experienced five or more consecutive days of extreme heat. Houston, Texas, had the longest heat streak of 22 days.

Health and Human Rights Concerns:

Extreme heat, along with other climate-related events like flooding and droughts, poses serious health risks and violates basic human rights. The article emphasizes the need to phase out fossil fuels to address these issues.

Call for Action:

Researchers stress the urgency of phasing out fossil fuels to mitigate the impacts of climate change. The article concludes by highlighting the need for countries to take immediate action, especially at global events like the United Nations COP 28 climate summit.

Infographic

Heating planet. Chart showing global mean temperature rising since 1970.
Source: Climate Central
Unbroken heat. Chart showing top ten cities which recorded longest extreme heat streaks in 2023.
Source: Climate Central

DEEP DIVE

Earth just had its hottest year on record — climate change is to blame

Around 7.3 billion people faced temperatures strongly influenced by global warming over the past year.

Nature

Carissa Wong

November 10, 2023

A firefighter takes a water break while combatting a wildfire during an excessive heat warning in Texas.
Extreme-heat events affected places including Texas in the past year. Credit: Brandon Bell/Getty

The past 12 months were the hottest on record. Some 7.3 billion people worldwide were exposed, for at least 10 days, to temperatures that were heavily influenced by global warming, with one-quarter of people facing dangerous levels of extreme heat over the past 12 months, according to a report by the non-profit organization Climate Central.

“These impacts are only going to grow as long as we continue to burn coal oil and natural gas,” says Andrew Pershing, the vice- president for science at Climate Central.Cities must protect people from extreme heat

Researchers have previously estimated the influence of climate change on specific extreme weather events, a process known as climate attribution. Now, scientists have calculated the impact of human-induced climate change on daily air temperatures in 175 countries and 920 cities from November 2022 to the start of October 2023.

They found that the average global temperature over the past 12 months was 1.32 ºC above that during the pre-industrial baseline period of 1850 to 1900, surpassing the previous record of 1.29 ºC that was set from October 2015 to September 2016 (see ‘Heating planet’). The report comes as the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service predicted that 2023 will be the hottest calendar year on record, with the average temperature up to October being 1.43 ºC above the pre-industrial average.

Heating planet. Chart showing global mean temperature rising since 1970.
Source: Climate Central

“This is the hottest temperature that our planet has experienced in something like 125,000 years,” says Pershing, the vice-president for science at Climate Central.

Most of this warming, about 1.28 ºC, results from human-induced climate change, with natural variation in the climate caused by processes such as the ongoing ocean-warming event El Niño contributing much less, says climate researcher Friederike Otto at Imperial College London.

By analysing daily air-temperature data and using computational climate models, the team calculated the effect of climate change on daily temperatures worldwide using a measure called the Climate Shift Index (CSI). The CSI scale runs from –5 to 5. A CSI value of zero means there is no detectable influence of human-caused climate change on the daily temperature, whereas a positive CSI value indicates how much more likely climate change made the daily temperature. A negative CSI value means climate change made the observed temperature less likely.Earth’s hottest month: these charts show what happened in July and what comes next

The researchers found that 7.3 billion people worldwide were exposed, for at least 10 days, to temperatures that were strongly impacted by climate change. In the first half of the past 12 months, tropical regions across South America, Africa and the Malay archipelago experienced the most days with temperatures that were strongly attributable to climate change, defined as having a CSI value of three or higher. These effects were felt even more strongly in the second half of the year-long period.

In Jamaica, the country where global warming had the greatest impact on daily temperatures, people experienced temperatures that were made over 4.5 times more likely by climate change. Guatemala and Rwanda also experienced temperatures that were made more than four times more likely by climate change.

The researchers also estimated the extent to which 700 cities with populations of at least 1 million experienced extreme heat over the past 12 months, defined as daily temperatures that are expected to occur less than 1% of the time in that region. They did this by comparing recent temperature data with data collected over a reference period of 1991–2020.

Unbroken heat. Chart showing top ten cities which recorded longest extreme heat streaks in 2023.
Source: Climate Central

The team found that 156 cities in 37 countries experienced five or more consecutive days of extreme heat, with 144 cities experiencing temperatures that were made at least 2 times more likely by climate change. Houston, Texas, had the longest heat streak of 22 days. This was followed by Jakarta, New Orleans, Louisiana, Tangerang in Indonesia and Quijing in China where people faced at least 16 days of extreme heat in a row (see ‘Unbroken heat’). Worldwide, 1.9 billion people, or 24% of the world’s population, endured five consecutive days of extreme heat.

Extreme heat, along with flooding and droughts, is often deadly and displaces thousands of people. “By continuing to burn fossil fuels the way we do, it’s a massive violation of the really basic human rights of the vast majority of the planet,” says Otto.

Next year, El Niño, which is projected to last until at least April 2024, will push temperatures even higher, says Pershing.Extreme heat harms health — what is the human body’s limit?

The findings highlight the need to phase out fossil fuels, say researchers. “If we don’t phase out fossil fuels now and stop burning them imminently, this will be a very cool year soon,” says Otto.

“This is a really appreciated effort, it’s great in that this approach can provide continuous updates on the hottest 12 months, not just the hottest [calendar] year, so that hopefully helps to raise awareness of climate change’s impacts each month,” says climate researcher Karsten Haustein at Leipzig University.

This study clearly provides robust evidence for the science of climate-change attribution, says climate researcher Cecilia Conde at the National University in Mexico.

Joyce Kimutai, a meteorologist at Kenya Meteorological Department in Nairobi, says the analysis underscores the urgent need for countries to take action. She adds that at the United Nations COP 28 climate summit this month, the world needs to make progress on phasing out fossil fuels and implementing the Loss and Damage fund through which richer countries have agreed to help poorer countries cope with the social and physical devastation caused by climate change.

Originally published at https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03523-3

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