Berliner Boersenzeitung - What is making 2023 likely the hottest year recorded

EUR -
AED 3.862042
AFN 71.804229
ALL 98.797466
AMD 410.848078
ANG 1.899611
AOA 958.940084
ARS 1058.238507
AUD 1.620225
AWG 1.892645
AZN 1.789395
BAM 1.967098
BBD 2.128123
BDT 125.953443
BGN 1.956332
BHD 0.396362
BIF 3113.654377
BMD 1.051469
BND 1.420345
BOB 7.309987
BRL 6.106303
BSD 1.054054
BTN 88.858242
BWP 14.398702
BYN 3.449312
BYR 20608.799376
BZD 2.124603
CAD 1.482114
CDF 3017.717361
CHF 0.931823
CLF 0.037163
CLP 1025.434617
CNY 7.631781
CNH 7.633625
COP 4610.430258
CRC 537.123794
CUC 1.051469
CUP 27.863938
CVE 110.899869
CZK 25.280471
DJF 187.688029
DKK 7.458945
DOP 63.517579
DZD 140.586407
EGP 52.170119
ERN 15.77204
ETB 131.427132
FJD 2.391409
FKP 0.829943
GBP 0.835835
GEL 2.870265
GGP 0.829943
GHS 16.600348
GIP 0.829943
GMD 74.654183
GNF 9083.084398
GTQ 8.138513
GYD 220.516588
HKD 8.183129
HNL 26.634729
HRK 7.500403
HTG 138.343291
HUF 410.963645
IDR 16706.744023
ILS 3.829478
IMP 0.829943
INR 88.660528
IQD 1380.730543
IRR 44253.716178
ISK 145.081723
JEP 0.829943
JMD 167.279216
JOD 0.745807
JPY 161.530937
KES 136.168674
KGS 91.27086
KHR 4230.257223
KMF 493.08668
KPW 946.322022
KRW 1469.239507
KWD 0.323541
KYD 0.878345
KZT 526.313
LAK 23147.955604
LBP 94386.027846
LKR 306.711669
LRD 189.714255
LSL 19.056857
LTL 3.104715
LVL 0.636023
LYD 5.15863
MAD 10.589624
MDL 19.267668
MGA 4925.289533
MKD 61.559552
MMK 3415.131453
MNT 3572.892815
MOP 8.446615
MRU 41.912953
MUR 49.755948
MVR 16.245234
MWK 1827.697802
MXN 21.562203
MYR 4.686928
MZN 67.1904
NAD 19.056857
NGN 1769.759472
NIO 38.782387
NOK 11.685421
NPR 142.17627
NZD 1.797046
OMR 0.404805
PAB 1.054054
PEN 3.992029
PGK 4.245903
PHP 62.029854
PKR 292.749574
PLN 4.308154
PYG 8212.168477
QAR 3.845012
RON 4.976502
RSD 117.004332
RUB 110.908439
RWF 1439.152416
SAR 3.949844
SBD 8.822449
SCR 14.320848
SDG 632.459485
SEK 11.526107
SGD 1.415456
SHP 0.829943
SLE 23.868157
SLL 22048.791639
SOS 602.35403
SRD 37.320818
STD 21763.29276
SVC 9.222974
SYP 2641.848152
SZL 19.051426
THB 36.453918
TJS 11.235312
TMT 3.690657
TND 3.343207
TOP 2.462647
TRY 36.425338
TTD 7.15912
TWD 34.112826
TZS 2781.137122
UAH 43.741741
UGX 3905.431745
USD 1.051469
UYU 44.926765
UZS 13521.66479
VES 48.905782
VND 26723.093681
VUV 124.832555
WST 2.935272
XAF 659.740094
XAG 0.034439
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.841648
XDR 0.806231
XOF 659.746405
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.78845
ZAR 19.031706
ZMK 9464.475804
ZMW 29.063935
ZWL 338.572704
  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    63.26

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    34.15

    +0.56%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    24.58

    +0.49%

  • SCS

    0.4500

    13.72

    +3.28%

  • CMSC

    0.0578

    24.73

    +0.23%

  • AZN

    0.7700

    66.4

    +1.16%

  • RIO

    0.6300

    62.98

    +1%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    46.57

    -0.39%

  • BTI

    -0.0500

    37.33

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    8.7200

    152.5

    +5.72%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.79

    +0.29%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    13.37

    +1.2%

  • BP

    -0.4000

    29.32

    -1.36%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    27.02

    +0.93%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    8.91

    +2.02%

What is making 2023 likely the hottest year recorded
What is making 2023 likely the hottest year recorded / Photo: CRISTINA QUICLER - AFP

What is making 2023 likely the hottest year recorded

Human-made climate change is supercharging natural weather phenomena to drive heatwaves roasting Asia, Europe and North America that could make 2023 the hottest year since records began, scientists say.

Text size:

Here experts explain how 2023 has got so hot, warning these record temperatures will get worse even if humanity sharply cuts its planet-warming gas emissions.

- El Nino and more -

After a record hot summer in 2022, this year the Pacific warming phenomenon known as El Nino has returned, heating up the oceans.

"This may have provided some additional warmth to the North Atlantic, though because the El Nino event is only just beginning, this is likely only a small portion of the effect," Robert Rohde of US temperature monitoring group Berkeley Earth wrote in an analysis.

The group calculated that there was an 81-percent chance that 2023 would become the warmest year since thermometer records began in the mid-19th century.

- Dust and sulphur -

The warming of the Atlantic may also have been sharpened by a decrease of two substances that typically reflect sunlight away from the ocean: dust blowing off the Sahara desert and sulphur aerosols from shipping fuel.

Rohde's analysis of temperatures in the North Atlantic region noted "exceptionally low levels of dust coming off the Sahara in recent months."

This was due to unusually weak Atlantic trade winds, said Karsten Haustein of Germany's federal Climate Service Centre.

Meanwhile new shipping restrictions in 2020 slashed toxic sulphur emissions. "This would not explain all of the present North Atlantic spike, but may have added to its severity," Rohde noted.

- 'Stagnant' anticyclones –

Warming oceans affect land weather patterns, prompting heatwaves and droughts in some places and storms in others. The hotter atmosphere sucks up moisture and dumps it elsewhere, said Richard Allan, professor of climate science at the University of Reading.

Scientists highlighted the length and intensity of the lingering anticyclone systems bringing the heatwaves.

"Where stagnant high-pressure areas persist over continents, the air sinks and warms, melting away clouds, causing intense summer sunshine to parch the soils, heating the ground and air above," with heatwaves "lodged in place" for weeks, Allan said.

In Europe, "the hot air which pushed in from Africa is now staying put, with settled high pressure conditions meaning that heat in warm sea, land and air continues to build," added Hannah Cloke, a climate scientist at the University of Reading.

- Climate change's role –

Scientists at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said in their global summary report this year that climate change had made deadly heatwaves "more frequent and more intense across most land regions since the 1950s".

This month's heatwaves are "not one single phenomenon but several acting at the same time," said Robert Vautard, director of France's Pierre-Simon Laplace climate institute. "But they are all strengthened by one factor: climate change."

Higher global temperatures make heatwaves longer and more intense. Despite being the main driver, climate change is one variable that humans can influence by reducing emissions from fossil fuels.

"We are moving out of the usual and well-known natural oscillations of the climate to unchartered and more extreme territory," said Melissa Lazenby, senior lecturer in climate change at the University of Sussex.

"However, we have the ability to reduce our human influence on the climate and weather and to not create more extreme and long-lasting heatwaves."

- Heat forecast -

Berkeley Earth warned the current El Nino could make Earth even hotter in 2024.

The IPCC has said heatwaves risk getting more frequent and intense, though governments can limit climate change by reducing countries' greenhouse gas emissions.

"This is just the beginning," said Simon Lewis, chair of global change science at University College London.

"Deep, rapid and sustained cuts in carbon emissions to net zero can halt the warming, but humanity will have to adapt to even more severe heatwaves in the future."

(P.Werner--BBZ)