Policy & Planning

Scorching July is world’s hottest month on record

Published by

Climate Central

The reign of record hot months in 2016 continues, with last month claiming the title of hottest July on record globally, according to data released by NASA on Monday. This July was also the hottest month on record for the world.

The streak means that 2016 is still well on its way to upsetting last year as the hottest year on record. Or as Gavin Schmidt, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute of Space Studies, said on Twitter, there is still a 99 percent chance 2016 will take the top slot.

How temperatures across the globe differed from average in July 2016. 

Every month so far this year has been record hot. In NASA’s data, that streak goes back to October 2015, which was the first month in its data set that was more than 1˚C hotter than average.

In NOAA’s records, the streak of hottest months goes back to May 2015. If July is record warm in its data (which will be released Wednesday, July will be the 15th record-warm month in a row.

By NASA’s reckoning, July 2016 was 1.27˚F (0.84˚C) hotter than the 1951-1980 average. It was 0.2˚F (0.11˚C) above July 2015, the next warmest July in records that go back to 1880. The record July heat also means this was the hottest month the planet has seen over the course of NASA’s records. That’s because July is also generally the hottest month of the year due the fact that it’s summer in the northern hemisphere where there’s more land.

http://twitter.com/ClimateOfGavin/status/765281511121780737/photo/1
http://twitter.com/ClimateOfGavin/status/765281511121780737/photo/1

 

Schmidt said he expects July will be the last record hot month of this year as the residual heat from an exceptionally strong El Niño dies away. Though El Niño itself was declared over in June, global temperatures tend to lag by about two to three months.

While El Niño provided a boost to global temperatures this year, the bulk of the heat is what has been trapped by accumulating greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

Nations have agreed to keep the rise of global temperatures below 2˚C (3.6˚F) by the end of this century, and are discussing aiming for an even more ambitious 1.5˚C (2.7˚F). But temperatures for the year-to-date have been hovering close to 1.5˚C above preindustrial times all year.

The year-to-date average of global temperatures during each month of 2016 through June.

If 2016 does end up the hottest year on record, it will be the third such year in a row. But just as the streak of record-hot months will come to an end, so too may the streak of record-hot years. Forecasters expect a La Niña to form, which tends to mean a relative cooling of global temperatures.

These are only small blips on the overall long-term trend of warming, which tips the odds toward record heat and away from record cold. Of the 15 hottest years on record, 14 have occurred in the 21st century, but the last record-cold year was in 1911.

Source: Climate Central. Reproduced with permission.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Beyond ‘Bigger is Better’: Anker Solix unveils XE, the next-gen dual-cycle home battery

Built around a 7kWh modular foundation and engineered for daily dual-cycling, the XE shatters the…

8 May 2026

“Blows your mind:” Regulator says boom in home batteries and PV puts 82 pct renewables within reach

Regulator says surge in home battery and rooftop PV installations puts the 82 pct renewables…

7 May 2026

Australian solar company signs historic deal to help “entire country” quit diesel power

One of Australia's leading commercial solar and energy services companies has signed an historic deal…

7 May 2026

Federal Labor unveils plans for fossil gas reservation to ensure share of production is not exported

One-fifth of all gas exports on the east coast will be set aside for use…

7 May 2026

The spot mirage: Low wholesale prices show the future, but are a poor signal for new wind and solar

Wholesale electricity prices are too low to support either new generation, or even old generation.…

7 May 2026

How mapping of PV “fingerprints” can indicate what the rooftop solar juggernaut will do next

A computer scientist has found a way to accurately forecast what rooftop solar -- the…

7 May 2026