Policy & Planning

This graphic puts global warming in full perspective

Published by

Climate Central

To say the world is having a streak like no other is an understatement. Global warming has made cold scarce on a planetary scale.

This March clocked in as the second warmest March on record when compared to the 20th century average, according to newly released data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. NASA data published last week came to the same conclusion, comparing temperatures to a 1951-1980 baseline.

The NOAA data shows the planet was 1.9°F (1.05°C) above the 20th century average for March, the first time any month has breached the 1°C threshold in the absence of El Niño. This March is the latest freakishly hot month following three years in a row of record heat.

NOAA and NASA baselines don’t really tell the whole story. How much the world has warmed since pre-industrial times is a crucial measuring stick for international climate talks and a more accurate representation of how much climate change is altering the planet.

Using the baseline of 1881-1910, a new, more dire picture of global warming emerges. This March was 2.4°F (1.3°C) above the pre-industrial average by that measure. More notably, this March marks a whopping 627 months in a row of warmer than normal temperatures. If you were born after December 1964, you’ve never experienced a month cooler than average on this planet.

To understand what that looks like, take a peek at the global temperature chart below. Each month is represented by a box. Cool blues have been disappearing, replaced by a wave of unending heat. Climate change is likely to continue the streak of warmer than normal months into the foreseeable future as temperatures keep marching upward.

Source: Climate Central. Reproduced with permission.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Delays at Australia’s most powerful battery lead to a more than $90 million cut in payments

Regulator quantifies the revenue cuts caused by the delayed start of the giant shock absorber"…

30 May 2026

Huge six-hour battery gets federal green tick for grid sweet-spot at edge of coal hub

Plans to install a big battery with up to six hours storage in a sweet…

29 May 2026

State locks in six renewable energy zones after final round of nips, tucks and rethinks

State formally declares five onshore renewable energy zones and one “shoreline” REZ, to guide its…

29 May 2026

Lower emissions, lower prices, and new investment: It’s been a good week for Labor’s green energy plan

A cut in emissions led by more renewables, batteries and EVs, and less coal, lower…

29 May 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: Plugging the holes in EV charging

Jet Charge founder Tim Washington on the need for more chargers, faster machines, multiple bays…

29 May 2026

Big batteries scoop the pool in grid firming tender that was also open to gas generators

Big batteries scoop the pool and sideline gas in "firming tender" designed to secure supply…

29 May 2026