July
was the fourth-warmest such month on record globally, and the 329th consecutive
month with a global-average surface temperature above the 20th-century average,
according to an analysis released
Wednesday by the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC).
The
combined-average July temperature over global land and ocean surfaces was
61.52°F, which was 1.12°F above the 20th-century average. This was the 36th
straight July with a global temperature above the 20th-century average.
Global
surface temperature departures from average during July 2012. Click on the
image for a larger version.
Credit:
NOAA.
The
last time the globe experienced a cooler-than-average July occurred in 1976,
when Gerald Ford was the U.S. president.
The
globally averaged temperature over land areas was the third highest for July on
record. For Northern Hemisphere land areas only, however, it was the warmest
July on record, which is significant since this is where most of the planet’s
land masses are located.
According
to NCDC, which is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), July marked the fourth consecutive month that the Northern Hemisphere
has set a monthly land temperature record. The Southern Hemisphere land
temperature during July, on the other hand, was only the 33rd warmest for the
month.
Higher-than-average
monthly temperatures were especially pronounced across the U.S., which beat July
1936 for the title of thewarmest month on record in the lower 48 states. The
extreme drought worsened during the month, with the worst drought categories
doubling from 10 percent to 22 percent between July and August. The dry weather
and extreme heat “devastated crops and livestock from the Great Plains to the
Midwest,” NOAA said.
Sea
ice extent trends, showing the rapid melt of sea ice during the 2012 melt
season so far. Click on the image for a larger version.
Credit:
NSIDC.
Studies
show that manmade global warming is shifting the odds in favor of more extreme
heat events, and projections also show that drought conditions may become more
common and severe in parts of the world as greenhouse gases continue to build
up in the atmosphere.
One study published on August
6 by NASA climate scientist James Hansen found that the odds of
extreme heat events such as the Texas heat wave of 2011 most likely would not
have occurred without manmade global warming, although many climate scientists
not involved with the study stopped short of tying extreme weather events to
global warming so definitively.
While
most regions of the globe experienced warmer-than-average monthly temperatures
in July, Australia, northern and western Europe, eastern Russia, Alaska, and
southern South America were all cooler than average. In Australia, July was the
eighth-coldest July in the country’s 63-years of recordkeeping.
During
July, sea surface temperatures continued to increase in the eastern and
equatorial Pacific Ocean, a sign of developing El Niño
conditions, according to NOAA. After two years of La Niña
conditions, which featured cooler-than-average waters in the tropical Pacific,
the developing El Niño is already boosting global temperatures. The
January-to-July period is now tied with 2001 as the 10th-warmest such period on
record, NOAA reported. El Niño years tend to be warmer than average worldwide.
July
featured a precipitous drop in
Arctic sea ice cover, which declined by 1.2 million square miles —
equivalent to the states of Alaska, California, and Texas combined. Antarctic
sea ice was 2.2 percent above average during July.
A
marked decline in Arctic sea ice cover, along with increasing sea ice cover
around the South Pole, is consistent with projections from climate change
computer model simulations.
The
month also featured an unusual melt event in
Greenland, when the portion of the ice sheet that was experiencing
surface melting expanded to cover nearly the entire ice sheet for several days,
an event that had not been seen for 150 years. A study released Wednesday found
that more of Greenland's ice sheet has already melted so far this season
compared to the past 30 years.
Typically,
about half of the ice sheet experiences summer melting, with widespread and
prolonged melting of higher elevation areas considered to be a rarity.
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