UK Sea Surface Temperatures In 2023 Hottest On Record; 0.9C Above 1961-1990 Average
The water near the UKs coasts was hotter in 2023 than scientists have ever before recorded, a report has found, with children today experiencing a hotter and wetter climate than that in which their parents and grandparents grew up.
The sea surface temperature near coasts was 0.9C hotter and winter rainfall across the country was 24% greater over the last decade than the average from 1961 to 1990, according to the State of the UK Climate 2023 report. It found the number of hot (28C) days has more than doubled over that period, and the number of very hot (30C) and extremely hot (32C) days has more than tripled.
Since the UK hit 40C heat for the first time in 2022 absolutely smashing records the scientists behind the annual report started to pay more attention to extremes, said Mike Kendon, a climate scientist at the Met Office who was the lead author of the report. The scientists found the number of very wet days was 20% greater in the last decade than in the 1961-1990 period.
The mass burning of coal, oil and gas since the 1850s together with the boom in livestock farming and heavy industry has heated the planet by 1.3C and upended weather patterns that used to vary only naturally. The report found human activity had made the UKs unusually high average temperature last year 150 times more likely.
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https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/jul/25/water-temperatures-near-uk-last-year-were-hottest-on-record-say-scientists