After record-heat July: a new European temperature record was set on the Italian island

    14 Aug 2021

    A new European temperature record was set on the Italian island of Sicily. The previous highest figure was recorded in Athens, Greece, in 1977.

    On Wednesday, August 11, a temperature of +48.8° C was recorded on the island of Sicily.

    This is a new record for Europe, the Kharkiv Regional Center for Hydrometeorology states, citing an automatic meteorological station in Syracuse.

    Meteorologists note that the air temperature reached such indicators under the influence of an abnormal heatwave of African origin (“heat dome”).

    The information was confirmed by the local agrometeorological center (Servizio Informativo Agrometeorologico Siciliano).

    This figure became a new record not only in Italy but throughout Europe for all the time of instrumental observations.

    The previous record for the maximum air temperature was +48.0° C and was recorded in Athens (Greece) on July 10, 1977.

    The Italian Ministry of Health has already announced a “red” level of danger in several cities due to the heat.

    What was the background: in Greece, a wave of intense heat continues; on August 9, the temperature in one of the regions exceeded +46° C.

    The city of Langadas in northern Greece on August 10 recorded the highest temperature in the country, reaching 47.1° C.

    July 2021 was the world’s third-hottest July on record – EU scientists

    Last month was one of the world’s hottest Julys on record, behind only 2019 and 2016, with unusually high temperatures seen in regions from Finland to the United States, EU scientists said on August 3.

    It is the latest milestone in a long-term warming trend that saw the last seven years rank as the world’s hottest on record, as emissions of greenhouse gases change the planet’s climate, The Peninsula Qatar reports.

    “When we look at global temperatures, there are swings from year to year or even month to month,” Freja Vamborg, senior scientist at the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, told Reuters.

    “But ultimately, the underlying thing we see is a warming trend globally, and in most regions of the world.”

    Last month tied with July 2020 as the world’s third-hottest on record, behind July 2019 and July 2016, Copernicus said. It was Europe’s second-hottest July on record, after 2010.

    Copernicus’ records go back to 1950 but are cross-checked with other datasets that trace back to the mid-19th century.

    Multiple regions were beset by extreme weather events last month – in line with scientists’ consensus that global warming in Italy and heatwaves are more likely and more severe and that a hotter planet will lead to heavier rainfall.

    Record-breaking heat in the United States and Canada, which began in June, killed hundreds of people and fanned wildfires. In China, Belgium and Germany, extreme rainfall caused deadly floods.

    Australia’s tropical north recorded its highest daily maximum temperature last month, while temperatures over Northern Africa were higher than normal “almost everywhere,” Copernicus said.

    Some regions were slightly colder than average, including Germany and parts of Russia.

    Ralf Toumi, co-director of Grantham Institute on climate change at Imperial College London, said the recent bursts of record-breaking heat are no surprise, given the long-term pattern of rising temperatures.

    “This is a constant casino we’re playing, and we’re just picking the high numbers again and again,” he said.Let’s check the brand new IPCC report and story about extreme weather in the age of climate change here.

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