October marked the fifth time this year that the Earth broke heat records.Credit:Brook Mitchell
“When we combine our data with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,then we can say that this is the warmest year for the last 125,000 years,” Samantha Burgess,deputy director of the Copernicus Climate Change Service told Reuters.
An agency statement added that this meant 2023 was “virtually certain” to be the hottest on record.
Meanwhile,the average surface air temperature was 15.3 degrees,0.85 degrees above the 1991-2020 average for October.
The first 10 months of this year have recorded the highest global mean temperature at 1.43 degrees above the 1850-1900 pre-industrial average,and 0.1 degree hotter than the 10-month average for 2016 – the warmest year on record.
That year,the Great Barrier Reef experienced some of its worst coral bleaching as global temperatures soared during an El Nino event,which makes the weather hotter and drier.
The data comes just weeks before COP28,the annual United Nations climate meeting,where governments will discuss how to limit and prepare for future climate change as well as what progress has been made to reduce emissions since the 2015 Paris Agreement.