UN confirms 2020 record Arctic heat

UN confirms 2020 record Arctic heat

Temperature in a Siberian town 115km north of the Arctic Circle shot to an unprecedented 38°C last year.

Photo taken in June last year shows the land surface temperature in the Siberian region. (AP pic)
GENEVA:
An Arctic temperature record of more than 100° Fahrenheit (38° Celsius) was reached in a Siberian town last year during a prolonged heatwave that caused widespread alarm about the intensity of global warming, a UN agency confirmed today.

Verkhoyansk, where the record temperature was hit on June 20, 2020, is 115km (71 miles) north of the Arctic Circle – a region warming at more than double the global average.

The extreme heat fanned wildfires across northern Russia’s forests and tundra, even igniting normally waterlogged peatlands, and releasing record carbon emissions.

“It is possible, indeed likely, that greater extremes will occur in the Arctic region in the future,” the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said in a statement.

The probe was one of a record number of investigations the UN agency had opened into weather extremes as climate change unleashes unrivalled storms and heatwaves.

Since Arctic records are a new category, the data needed checking against other records as part of a vigorous verification process involving a network of volunteers.

The record is now an official entry in the World Weather & Climate Extremes Archive, a sort of Guinness World Records for weather that also includes the heaviest hailstone and longest lightening flash.

The agency already has a category for the Antarctic and had to create a new one for the Arctic after the submission in 2020 – one of the three warmest years on record.

A WMO committee is also verifying other potential heat records, including in Death Valley in California in 2020 and on the Italian island of Sicily this year.

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