News

In charts: Amid searing heat, the hottest day ever?

Was July 6, 2023, the hottest day in recorded human history? It is a statement that makes you sit up in your chair.

Our charts here look deeper at that claim. They come from the University of Maine, where a tool created to analyze climate data came to the conclusion that July 6 and the days before it were the hottest the planet has seen in satellite records going back more than four decades.

The data needs further analysis. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, for one, has counseled caution before jumping to conclusions. Yet, in some sense, whether it was the hottest day doesn’t really matter.

Why We Wrote This

A claim that July 6 was the hottest day ever deserves scrutiny. But regardless, it can be a useful wake-up call for the world to consider how thoroughly the abnormal is becoming normal – and what should be done.

Climate trends are well-established and, in many quarters, the subject of a great deal of alarm. These charts don’t really tell the story only of one day. They tell the same story that has been told for years, if not decades. As human-caused emissions of heat-trapping gasses warm the planet, they lead to new weather extremes and human suffering.

SOURCE:

Sean D. Birkel, ‘Daily 2-meter Air Temperature’, Climate Reanalyzer, Climate Change Institute, University of Maine. Accessed on July 19, 2023

|

Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Today, for example, Phoenix notched its 20th straight day of highs above 110 degrees Fahrenheit. And on multiple nights there recently, temperatures have failed to dip below 90 F. Heat records have also been reported elsewhere in the United States, and in Italy, France, Spain, and parts of China.

Communities are straining to keep residents safe and supplied with drinking water. One new study estimates that last summer’s record heat in Europe cost more than 61,000 human lives. 

Previous ArticleNext Article