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Home Science & Technology Science

2015 could end up as warmest year ever for the planet: NOAA

byCustoms Today Report
22/06/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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HONG KONG: May 2015 was a wacky month for weather. While precipitation in the United States set an all-time record, around the world it was the warmest May ever. In its latest update, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported that the world’s average surface temperature was up 1.57 degrees Fahrenheit above the 20th-century average in May.
According to the new data, nearly all regions of the earth were warmer than average in May. Search out the few cool spots on the map above and you’ll see cooler temperatures in the central United States, a small patch near Greenland, and northeastern Asia.
So while it was dumping buckets of rain in Colorado, Texas, and New Mexico, areas like Alaska, northern Scandinavia and parts of the equatorial Pacific Ocean were extra hot. Alaska in particular was a hot spot, recording its warmest May on record with an average temperature 5.6 degrees Fahrenheit higher than normal.
NOAA also reports that 2015 could end up as the warmest year ever for the planet; the average year to date temperature for Earth was above average.

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