Globally, November 2021 was estimated as the fifth warmest November on record. To reveal it Copernicus
He is about to end up run over, his mother saves himGlobally, November 2021 was estimated as the fifth warmest November on record. This was revealed by Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S), which regularly publishes monthly climate bulletins on observed changes in global air surface temperature, sea ice cover and hydrogeological variables.
The global average temperature in November 2021 was almost 0,2ºC lower than in November 2020, a record month, but very close to the temperatures of the other warmer months of November: in 2015, 2016 and 2019. The temperature in Europe was overall close to the 1991-2020 average, for the entire autumn season, and therefore also for the month of November. Ireland, Great Britain and southern Scandinavia experienced autumn heat near record levels.
@ Copernicus November
Regions where temperatures were significantly above average for both November and the season include most of North America, especially northeastern Canada, much of Siberia, and most of Africa and the Middle East. . The month and the entire season were colder than average in the Far East of Russia and Alaska, and across much of Central Asia and Australia.
?November #temperature highlights from the #CopernicusClimate Change Service #C3S:
?Globally, the 5th warmest on record
?nearly 0.2ºC cooler than the record-breaking previous year
?Temperature in Europe was close overall to its 1991-2020 average
➡ https://t.co/uSvRZROU9k pic.twitter.com/anf7pCZG46
— Copernicus ECMWF (@CopernicusECMWF) December 7, 2021
Therefore, the trail of record temperatures continues. Already the month of October was the third warmest October ever recorded globally, just as September 2021 was one of the four warmest September months ever recorded globally.
The road ahead for December seems to be marked, we'll see.
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Source: Copernicus ECMWF
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