LONDON: Without human-induced climate change, the UK’s average temperature last year exceeded 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first time in the recorded history hottest year in the UK.
The hottest year on record for the nation was 2022, according to the Met Office, which announced this on Thursday. The average temperature was 10.03 degrees Celsius.
The meteorological agency said that the 10 warmest years since records began in 1884 had all started in 2003, mirroring trends seen this winter in other parts of Europe.
The hottest year in the UK on record is 2022.
The Met Office’s Nikos Christidis, a climate attribution scientist, explained that they compared current temperatures to simulations that were stripped of the impact of human climate change.
According to the findings, 10 degrees Celsius would only be recorded once every 500 years in a natural environment. However, in our current climate, it might happen as regularly as every three to four years. The topic of the statement is related to climate change. The context of the findings is not clear.
Christidis has noted that, without more drastic reductions in carbon emissions, “a UK average temperature of 10 degrees Celsius might occur virtually every year” by the end of the century. This information is related to the topic of climate change. The context of Christidis’s remarks is not clear.
The Met Office research was made public. This was ahead of a larger investigation into EU and worldwide weather trends in 2017 by Copernicus. Copernicus is the planetary observation program of the European Union.
According to research, Earth has warmed by more than 1.1 degrees Celsius. This warming has occurred since the late 19th century. About half of that rise has taken place in the last 30 years. The research was released by the World Meteorological Organization in November.