2023-10-23 15:27:29
Astronomer Salman Al-Ramadan stated that the planet Earth continues to warm; After a record summer, the month of September 2023 set a new record, making it the hottest since the beginning of temperature records.! The European Center for Climate Change Monitoring Service (Cupernicus) stated that it was the warmest September in the world since 1940, and higher than the average for the period 1991-2020, and it was also the warmest September on record for the European continent. The average global temperature for the first nine months of the year (January-September) was higher than the corresponding average for the period 1991-2020 and higher than the nine-month average of 2016, the warmest calendar year on record. Average temperatures over the past 12 months have been above average over most of the world, and above average over almost all of Europe, and over most of North America, Greenland, Africa (especially the northwest), western and eastern Asia, southern and western South America, and eastern Antarctica. Much higher than average over some seas around Antarctica, in the European sector of the Arctic, and over a large part of the North Pacific Ocean, part of the South Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean and the southwestern Indian Ocean, and slightly higher than average over the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. It is below average in a few oceanic regions, especially over part of the southeastern Pacific Ocean, over Australia, western Antarctica, parts of western North America, eastern South America, and central and northeastern Asia. The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said: September 2023 is the warmest September on Earth in 174 years, as the planet witnessed another month of record temperatures around the world. It is the forty-ninth consecutive September and the fifth consecutive month with temperatures higher than the average of the twentieth century. Africa, Europe, North America, and South America all recorded the warmest September on record, and Asia the second, while Oceania had the third, and Antarctica witnessed the warmest September. , while the Arctic witnessed the second warmest month. For the sixth month in a row, September also witnessed a monthly rise in the global ocean surface temperature, equal to last August. The average global surface temperature since the beginning of the year was the warmest on record, and higher than the average of the twentieth century, and South America and Europe recorded their warmest record since the beginning of the year, while Africa witnessed the second warmest, with a probability greater than 99% that the year will be classified as the warmest year. Absolutely. The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) said: September 2023 is the warmest September ever, following a record summer.
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