| August 14, 2023 RELEASE 23-090 NASA Clocks July 2023 as Hottest Month on Record Ever Since 1880 Editor's Note: This release has been updated to add additional graphics, captions, and to spell out the words degrees Fahrenheit and Celsius. âSince day one, President Biden has treated the climate crisis as the existential threat of our time,â said Ali Zaidi, White House National Climate Advisor.â Against the backdrop of record high temperatures, wildfires, and floods, NASAâs analysis puts into context the urgency of President Bidenâs unprecedented climate leadership. From securing the Inflation Reduction Act, the largest climate investment in history, to invoking the Defense Production Act to supercharge domestic clean energy manufacturing, to strengthening climate resilience in communities nationwide, President Biden is delivering on the most ambitious climate agenda in history.â Overall, July 2023 was 0.43 degrees Fahrenheit (°F) (0.24 degrees Celsius (°C)) warmer than any other July in NASAâs record, and it was 2.1°F (1.18 °C) warmer than the average July between 1951 and 1980. The primary focus of the GISS analysis are long-term temperature changes over many decades and centuries, and a fixed base period yields anomalies that are consistent over time. Temperature "normals" are defined by several decades or more - typically 30 years. âNASA data confirms what billions around the world literally felt: temperatures in July 2023 made it the hottest month on record. In every corner of the country, Americans are right now experiencing firsthand the effects of the climate crisis, underscoring the urgency of President Bidenâs historic climate agenda,â said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. âThe science is clear. We must act now to protect our communities and planet; itâs the only one we have.â |
 This chart shows global temperature anomalies for every July since the 1880s, based on NASA's GISTEMP analysis. Anomalies reflect how much the global temperature was above or below the 1951-1980 norm for July. Credits: NASAâs Goddard Institute for Space Studies / NASA's Earth Observatory |
Parts of South America, North Africa, North America, and the Antarctic Peninsula were especially hot, experiencing temperatures increases around 7.2 °F (4 °C) above average. Overall, extreme heat this summer put tens of millions of people under heat warnings and was linked to hundreds of heat-related illnesses and deaths. The record-breaking July continues a long-term trend of human-driven warming driven primarily by greenhouse gas emissions that has become evident over the past four decades. According to NASA data, the five hottest Julys since 1880 have all happened in the past five years.
âClimate change is impacting people and ecosystems around the world, and we expect many of these impacts to escalate with continued warming,â said Katherine Calvin, chief scientist and senior climate advisor at NASA Headquarters in Washington. âOur agency observes climate change, its impacts, and its drivers, like greenhouse gases, and we are committed providing this information to help people plan for the future.â
NASA assembles its temperature record from surface air temperature data from tens of thousands of metrological stations, as well as sea surface temperature data acquired by ship- and buoy-based instruments. This raw data is analyzed using methods that account for the varied spacing of temperature stations around the globe and for urban heating effects that could skew the calculations.
âThis July was not just warmer than any previous July â it was the warmest month in our record, which goes back to 1880,â said GISS Director Gavin Schmidt. âThe science is clear this isnât normal. Alarming warming around the world is driven primarily by human-caused greenhouse gas emissions. And that rise in average temperatures is fueling dangerous extreme heat that people are experiencing here at home and worldwide.â
High sea surface temperatures contributed to Julyâs record warmth. NASAâs analysis shows especially warm ocean temperatures in the eastern tropical Pacific, evidence of the El Niño that began developing in May 2023. Phenomena such as El Niño or La Niña, which warm or cool the tropical Pacific Ocean, can contribute a small amount of year-to-year variability in global temperatures. But these contributions are not typically felt when El Niño starts developing in Northern Hemisphere summer. NASA expects to see the biggest impacts of El Niño in February, March, and April 2024.
For more information on NASAâs global temperature record, visit:
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/2023/climate-media-resources
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 | Press Contacts Jackie McGuinness / Katherine Rohloff |
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