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‘Gobsmackingly bananas’ record temperatures are dividing scientists

Global temperature records are being broken on a consecutive monthly basis. That’s not good

October 16, 2023 / 16:39 IST
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Aerosols have historically served to mask human-induced climate change by reflecting some of the sun’s heat back into space.

“Surprising. Astounding. Staggering. Unnerving. Bewildering. Flabbergasting. Disquieting. Gobsmacking. Shocking. Mind boggling.”

That’s not really what you want to hear from one of the world’s preeminent climate scientists in response to the latest global air temperature data, but that was the reaction of Ed Hawkins, professor of climate science at the University of Reading and creator of the iconic “warming stripes” visualisation. Zeke Hausfather, a researcher at nonprofit group Berkeley Earth, described it more succinctly: “Gobsmackingly bananas.”

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Last month was the hottest September on record by a wide margin: almost a full 1C (33.8F) above the 1991-2020 average, and 0.5C higher than the previous record in 2020. It comes after the warmest June ever recorded. And the toastiest July. The same was true for August. And it will likely be followed by a warmer-than-average October.