Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Climate, June is the hottest month of the last 136 years, the average global temperature to 16,33 degrees. – The Sun 24 Hours

History Article

Close

This entry was posted on July 21, 2015 at 15:45.
The last change is the July 21, 2015 at 16:44.

Three of the most authoritative global organizations that study climate (Japan Meteorological Agency, NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), have agreed that June was the hottest meso in Earth’s history. That is when climatologists studying changes in temperature. The announcement of the first two institutions is of recent days confirm by the US federal agency for meteorology it came yesterday.

The average temperature on earth has revealed that on the surface of the ocean in June was the highest in 136 years. Most are 0.88 degrees Celsius above the average of 15.5 degrees recorded in the last century. Continuing to read the report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the US federal agency for meteorology, after the record of February, March and May this year, also in June has seen the thermometer rise as ever over the last 136 years. The global average temperature stood at 16.33 degrees, 0.88 degrees above the average of the twentieth century and 0.12 degrees in most of the previous high marked in June 2014. On the earth’s surface, the mercury has registered 1, 26 degrees higher than the average of this secoloo, while on the sea surface the difference was +0.74 degrees. In countries such as Spain and Austria the temperature stood at +1.4 degrees than the average of the period 1981-2010. Scandinavia, by contrast, was one of the few cold spots on the planet, with temperatures between 1 and 2 below the average of recent decades.

In greater detail in the first half of the year the thermometer marked a world average of 14.35 degrees, 0.85 higher than in the twentieth century and 0.16 more than the previous record, dated 2010 . And 2010 was the last year with “El Nino”, the climate phenomenon that heats the currents of the Western and Central Pacific. For this year, meteorologists predict that El Nino will be strengthened. For Jessica Blunden NOAA “is almost impossible that 2015 will not be the warmest year on record”, breaking the record of 2014.



Permalink

LikeTweet

No comments:

Post a Comment