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Monday's scorching heat has a climate fingerprint

Monday was the hottest day of the year, surpassing a heat index of 113 degrees today at RDU. The record high temperature was five times more likely due to human-caused climate change, according to the Climate Shift Index.
Posted 2023-08-14T20:56:00+00:00 - Updated 2023-08-14T22:05:42+00:00
Climate change and hotter temperatures worldwide

The heat index on Monday surpassed 113 degrees at Raleigh-Durham International Airport, marking the hottest day of the year during a summer of record heat.

Climate change made Raleigh's high temperatures five times more likely, according to the Climate Shift Index.

The Climate Shift Index is a tool that uses a categorical scale to show how much climate change is influencing temperature on a particular day with data analyzed by the nonprofit Climate Central. Areas west of Raleigh, including Durham and Fayetteville, had temperatures made four times more likely because of climate change.

Climate Central analysts say this heat would be very difficult to encounter without human-caused climate change, not necessarily impossible, but highly unlikely.

Monday 8/14/2023
Monday 8/14/2023

July was the hottest month every recorded on earth, by a wide margin.

This year has been the third-hottest on record through July, according to combined data from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Those organizations say this year has a 99% chance of finishing among the top five on record.

Climate Central
Climate Central

A new satellite image from the NASA Earth Observatory shows record heat in recent years is impacting sea ice growth in the Antarctic.

The continent is currently in the depths of winter, but the amount of sea ice is drastically lower than what is considered normal for this time of year.

NASA Earth Observatory satellite image - July 2023
NASA Earth Observatory satellite image - July 2023

“What we’re seeing this year is uncharted territory in the satellite record,” said Walt Meier, a sea ice scientist at National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), one of NASA’s Distributed Active Archive Centers.

Antarctica has been seeing a sharp decline in its sea ice coverage since 2014. The sea ice in Antarctica this July covered about 2 million square kilometers less than the 1981 to 2010 average, an area larger than Mexico.

Human-caused climate change is believed to be the main driving force behind the low ice coverage, according to NASA scientists.

Melting ice can influence ocean currents and sea level rise across the globe.

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