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Saturday, June 7, 2025

Get ready for several years of killer heat, top weather forecasters warn

by

9 days ago
20250528
Ricky Leath, an outreach specialist with the City of Miami, talks with Bei Zhao, right, as he works with the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust to distribute bottles of water and other supplies to the homeless population, helping them manage high temperatures, May 15, 2024, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)

Ricky Leath, an outreach specialist with the City of Miami, talks with Bei Zhao, right, as he works with the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust to distribute bottles of water and other supplies to the homeless population, helping them manage high temperatures, May 15, 2024, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky, File)

Get ready for sev­er­al years of even more record-break­ing heat that push­es Earth to more dead­ly, fiery and un­com­fort­able ex­tremes, two of the world’s top weath­er agen­cies fore­cast.

There’s an 80% chance the world will break an­oth­er an­nu­al tem­per­a­ture record in the next five years, and it’s even more prob­a­ble that the world will again ex­ceed the in­ter­na­tion­al tem­per­a­ture thresh­old set 10 years ago, ac­cord­ing to a five-year fore­cast re­leased Wednes­day by the World Me­te­o­ro­log­i­cal Or­ga­ni­za­tion and the U.K. Me­te­o­ro­log­i­cal Of­fice.

“High­er glob­al mean tem­per­a­tures may sound ab­stract, but it trans­lates in re­al life to a high­er chance of ex­treme weath­er: stronger hur­ri­canes, stronger pre­cip­i­ta­tion, droughts,” said Cor­nell Uni­ver­si­ty cli­mate sci­en­tist Na­tal­ie Ma­howald, who wasn’t part of the cal­cu­la­tions but said they made sense. “So high­er glob­al mean tem­per­a­tures trans­lates to more lives lost.”

With every tenth of a de­gree the world warms from hu­man-caused cli­mate change “we will ex­pe­ri­ence high­er fre­quen­cy and more ex­treme events (par­tic­u­lar­ly heat waves but al­so droughts, floods, fires and hu­man-re­in­forced hur­ri­canes/ty­phoons),” emailed Jo­han Rock­strom, di­rec­tor of the Pots­dam In­sti­tute for Cli­mate Im­pact Re­search in Ger­many. He was not part of the re­search.

And for the first time there’s a chance — al­beit slight — that be­fore the end of the decade, the world’s an­nu­al tem­per­a­ture will shoot past the Paris cli­mate ac­cord goal of lim­it­ing warm­ing to 1.5 de­grees Cel­sius (2.7 de­grees Fahren­heit) and hit a more alarm­ing 2 de­grees Cel­sius (3.6 de­grees Fahren­heit) of heat­ing since the mid-1800s, the two agen­cies said.

There’s an 86% chance that one of the next five years will pass 1.5 de­grees and a 70% chance that the five years as a whole will av­er­age more than that glob­al mile­stone, they fig­ured.

The pro­jec­tions come from more than 200 fore­casts us­ing com­put­er sim­u­la­tions run by 10 glob­al cen­ters of sci­en­tists.

Ten years ago, the same teams fig­ured there was a sim­i­lar re­mote chance — about 1% — that one of the up­com­ing years would ex­ceed that crit­i­cal 1.5 de­gree thresh­old and then it hap­pened last year. This year, a 2-de­gree Cel­sius above pre-in­dus­tri­al year en­ters the equa­tion in a sim­i­lar man­ner, some­thing UK Met Of­fice longer term pre­dic­tions chief Adam Scaife and sci­ence sci­en­tist Leon Her­man­son called “shock­ing.”

“It’s not some­thing any­one wants to see, but that’s what the sci­ence is telling us,” Her­man­son said. Two de­grees of warm­ing is the sec­ondary thresh­old, the one con­sid­ered less like­ly to break, set by the 2015 Paris agree­ment.

Tech­ni­cal­ly, even though 2024 was 1.5 de­grees Cel­sius warmer than pre-in­dus­tri­al times, the Paris cli­mate agree­ment’s thresh­old is for a 20-year time pe­ri­od, so it has not been ex­ceed­ed. Fac­tor­ing in the past 10 years and fore­cast­ing the next 10 years, the world is now prob­a­bly about 1.4 de­grees Cel­sius (2.5 de­grees Fahren­heit) hot­ter since the mid 1800s, World Me­te­o­ro­log­i­cal Or­ga­ni­za­tion cli­mate ser­vices di­rec­tor Chris He­witt es­ti­mat­ed.

“With the next five years fore­cast to be more than 1.5C warmer than prein­dus­tri­al lev­els on av­er­age, this will put more peo­ple than ever at risk of se­vere heat waves, bring­ing more deaths and se­vere health im­pacts un­less peo­ple can be bet­ter pro­tect­ed from the ef­fects of heat. Al­so we can ex­pect more se­vere wild­fires as the hot­ter at­mos­phere dries out the land­scape,” said Richard Betts, head of cli­mate im­pacts re­search at the

Ice in the Arc­tic — which will con­tin­ue to warm 3.5 times faster than the rest of the world — will melt and seas will rise faster, He­witt said.

What tends to hap­pen is that glob­al tem­per­a­tures rise like rid­ing on an es­ca­la­tor, with tem­po­rary and nat­ur­al El Ni­no weath­er cy­cles act­ing like jumps up or down on that es­ca­la­tor, sci­en­tists said. But late­ly, af­ter each jump from an El Ni­no, which adds warm­ing to the globe, the plan­et doesn’t go back down much, if at all.

“Record tem­per­a­tures im­me­di­ate­ly be­come the new nor­mal,” said Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty cli­mate sci­en­tist Rob Jack­son.

By SETH BOREN­STEIN

WASH­ING­TON (AP)


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