with update to the state of the world climate change in August

with record high global Warming ocean surface temperature Earth has warmest Climate Change August records

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Visit Global Warming Updates for more. So let´s stay updated and active, to make a change in our world. Asia, Africa, North America and South America all experienced their warmest August on record.
Ph save Record-warm August temperatures covered nearly 13 percent of the world’s surface, making it one of five warmest-in-record withy ago FILE – In this Aug.
August 2023 had record ocean warmth for any month (+1.85°F or +1.03°C sea surface temperature anomaly of all months in NOAA’s ><>174-year-record!
Antarctica registered the fourth consecutive month with record-low sea ice extent, while global sea ice extent was also at a historic low in August.

  • 8 of the global Warming named tropical cycles that have spun into life during August, developed a live fish or not began tromping through human history at major hurricane strength (≥111 mph). This ties August itself with this record from the same month in2015.

  • For the globe as a whole, August 2023 was also tied with four other years for warmest on record (tied with 2016) in data going back to 1848. The global surface temperature for January–August was also the second highest on record for this period. Based on NOAA NCEI’s Global Annual Temperature Outlook and data through August, the likelihood that 2023 will be one of top two warmest years is greater than 95%.

  • This analysis of global temperature is part of NCEI’s suite of climate services and focuses on providing a timely track-record of the rapidly changing world climate.

Monthly Global Temperature and Climate Change

Augusts global surface temperature was 2.25°F (1.25°C) above the 20th-century average of 60.1F and now ranks as the most warmest August in NOAAs record, which dates back to… That is the third-highest monthly temperature anomaly of any month, topped only by March 2016 (0.56°F) and February 2015 after a major El Niño event which brought temperatures.


“While aggressive mitigation is essential, this analysis underscores the range of climate services NOAA delivers to help make for a Ready national,” said Dr. Sarah Karnack, research scientist and main private investigator on this kind of evaluation from NOAA CPO. Last month was not only the warmest August on record by a fair amount, but it also marked Earth’s 45th consecutive August and its 534th consecutive overall month with above-average temperatures beginning way back in December of Paleozoic times.

With the global marine heat waves and an emerging El Niño pumping warmth into most of these regions, unless the climate response to human influences changes course rather quickly — if there is such a thing as geological rapidity where greenhouse gas-forced changes are concerned…it looks like all-time records will soon be broken yet again.


Asia, Africa and North America set new record highs for August along with South America which has experienced its warmest August on land. The continents saw second-warmest Augusts on record in Europe, Oceania. For the Arctic it was the warmest August ever recorded.

The average global sea surface temperature was also the warmest on record for August, while year to date temperatures were nipping at last year’s heels with an anomaly of +1.7°F or 0.96°C through September excluding August data, running a close second offered only by…sigh…the decades old super El Niño/la Niña effect of similar magnitude that NOAA used as part in their interpolation methods to draw cool lines across our recent CA drought regularities?

South America, Africa, Asia and much of North America had above-average temperatures as well as Australia and many other parts in west Pacific Ocean. This August was the warmest on record for parts of southern North America, central South America, western and central Africa and along a narrow strip extending from northern Mali to India; much of China (and even more so southeastern China), east-Asia generally south Hokkaido in Japan through Korea into eastern Mongolia etc., northeastern Iraq & Qatar into southwestern Iran as well were also at their hottest such that overall this region had its second highest temperatures experienced anywhere during July/August since 2007 when reliable long term records are kept. The sea surface was warmer than average in most regions except for the central North and South Pacific Ocean, as well as near Antarctica. Almost 13% of the land surface worldwide registered record-warm temperatures this August, making it one its hottest since global sites were first ordered in 1951.
Cooler-than-average temperatures were also observed across parts of western and northeastern Russia, as well as over the Antarctic. Although sea surface temperatures continue to be near-average or below, and there remains significant sub-surface cool water “content” (anomaly), the atmosphere-ocean column is expected to become increasingly ENSO-neutral over the coming months. However, record cold for August covered less than 1% of the planet’s surface area.
Sea Ice and Snow Cover
This month saw the smallest global August sea ice extent on record for 2023 Internationally, August 2023 ice extent remained nearly half a million square miles below the previous record low for that month from 2019. Antarctica -Sea ice extent in Antarctica remained low for most of the month and was near record-low levels; it has seen four consecutive months with a record-low sea ice extent

Average sea ice extent for August 2023 Antarctic (right) and Arctic (left). Credit: NSIDC, NOAA NCEI
August 2023 Arctic sea ice extent was the eighth smallest in the satellite record at 2.15 million square miles (330,000 square miles below average). Stored water in the upper snow pack for western coniferous forests was rated at 72% on April 1, tied with 2018 as lowest since data collection began; and August Antarctic sea ice extent ranked lowest on record: following two months of observed record denial Action Open Helper Share this permalinks. Http Servlet Request. Across the first eight months of 2023, six have seen Antarctic sea ice extent at record-low levels.
Global Precipitation
El Niño strengthened the eastern Pacific Inter Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) which resulted in dry conditions over most part of the region between Indian and Pacific Oceans. Indian dry than South Asian monsoon; China all wet! Rain again hit the west coast of U.S. this time including southern California courtesy Hurricane Hilary while virtually all other parts of southwestern U.S were dry, as well Mexico and Central America had no rain since mid season (20th). The land surface was warmer than normal to set a new all-time high-temperature record in Europe, while the global ocean rate for early summer (June–August) reflected El Niño and contributed to enormous precipitation totals. August precipitation was above average in parts of the eastern United States, northern Europe and some areas across eastern Asia. At the same time, drought affected most of southwestern United States such as in Russia and parts of Europe Spain France China India Pakistan Mexico and Central America central South America east-central Brazil Australia.

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