BFF-08 November 2019 was second hottest on record: US

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ZCZC

BFF-08

CLIMATE-WARMING-NOVEMBER

November 2019 was second hottest on record: US

WASHINGTON, Dec 17, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Last month was the second hottest November in the 140-

year global climate record, a US government agency said Monday, adding that polar sea ice

also shrank to near-record lows.

The average global land and ocean surface temperature for November 2019 was 1.66 degrees

Fahrenheit (0.92 degree Celsius) above the 20th-century average and the second-highest

November temperature on record, just shy of November 2015, according to the US National

Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The world’s five hottest Novembers have all occurred since 2013.

Sea-ice coverage meanwhile shrank in both the Arctic and Antarctic to their second-lowest

sizes, behind November 2016.

Arctic sea ice coverage was 12.8 percent below the 1981-2010 average, while Antarctic

coverage was 6.4 percent below average.

Hotter than average temperatures were observed in most parts of the world with the exception

of North America and parts of western and central Asia.

The US data comes days after the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service, using

different methodology, determined that November 2019 was the joint hottest November in

history, along with the same months in 2015 and 2016.

A marathon UN climate summit wrapped up on Sunday with little to show, squeezing hard-earned

compromises from countries over a global warming battle plan that still fell well short of

what science says is needed to avert long term disaster.

The United Nations has said that 2019 is on course to be one of the three hottest years on

record, while the World Meteorological Organization said it was virtually certain that the

2010s had been the hottest decade in history.

BSS/AFP/AU/08:15 hrs