Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Global temperature reaches a maximum in 2016 for the third consecutive year – Economíahoy.mx

Reuters – 13:29 – 18/01/2017
  • temperatures, driven by both greenhouse gases generated by human beings and the natural phenomenon of The Child

global temperatures reached an all-time high for the third consecutive year in 2016, approaching a ceiling set for the global warming with extreme events unprecedented, said on Wednesday, official agencies of the united States.

The data, supported by results of other organizations, met two days before the inauguration of the president-elect of the united States, Donald Trump, who question whether climate change is caused by man.

The average temperatures of the earth surface and oceans in 2016 marked 0.94 degrees Celsius more than the average of the TWENTIETH Century of 13.9 degrees Celsius, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA, for its acronym in English).

The u.s. space agency NASA reported figures almost identical, and the Meteorological Office of the United Kingdom and the University of East Anglia and so on, which also controls the global temperature by the United Nations, said that 2016 was the warmest year in the records.

temperatures, driven by both greenhouse gases generated by human beings and the natural phenomenon of The Child who threw heat from the Pacific ocean last year, exceeded the record of 2015, when some 200 countries have agreed a plan to limit global warming. That record, in turn, eclipsed by 2014.

“we do Not expect year-record every year, but the warming trend is clear,” said Gavin Schmidt, director of the Goddard Institute of Space Studies of NASA.

records of global temperature dating from 1880. It is unlikely that in 2017 to register another record high since The Child vanished, and even though they continue to accumulate in the atmosphere greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels.

Among the extreme weather events of the past year, forest fires in Alberta were the costliest natural disaster in Canadian history, while Phalodi, in the west of India, recorded a temperature of 51 degrees Celsius on may 19, a national record.

North America also recorded its warmest year in records, the Great Barrier Reef in Australia has suffered severe damage by the high temperatures, and the ice in the sea both in the Arctic ocean and around Antarctica is in minimum record for mid-January.

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