Latest News

Europe has just experienced the warmest March ever recorded

Scientists from the European Union said that temperatures in Europe reached unprecedented heights as a result of climate change, and Europe had its warmest march since records began.

The EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service C3S said that last month, globally, was the second warmest March ever recorded. Only March 2024 will surpass it, according to a monthly bulletin.

March was the latest in a series of extreme heat. In 20 of the 21 months prior to this, temperatures were higher than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. The planet experienced its hottest year ever in 2018.

The average global temperature in March was about 1.6 degrees Celsius warmer than it was in pre-industrial time.

According to climate scientists, the main cause of climate change is greenhouse gases from fossil fuel combustion.

Samantha Burgess is the strategic lead for the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (C3S), which operates the C3S Service. She noted that Europe experienced extremes of both heavy rainfall and drought.

Burgess, a Burgess spokesperson, said that Europe experienced "many areas experiencing the driest march on record" and other areas their wettest mars on record in at least 47 years.

Climate change makes some areas drier and can exacerbate droughts by increasing evaporation and drying out the soil and vegetation.

The warming of our planet can also lead to heavy rains that cause flooding. This is because the warmer air contains more moisture. Storm clouds will therefore be "heavier", before they finally break.

C3S reported that the Arctic sea ice reached its lowest extent for a March ever in 47 years of satellite data. C3S said that the previous three months also had a record-low for their respective month.

C3S temperature records date back to 1940 and are cross-checked against global temperature records dating back to 1850.

(source: Reuters)