
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Average global temperatures reached record levels on land and sea last month, the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Monday.
The WMO announcement follows a report from the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service declaring record global temperatures that extended into the first week of July, breaking the previous record set in August 2016.
There’s little doubt among UN scientists that higher-than-normal temperatures will come at a cost, with negative impacts expected in fishing grounds and knock-on climate emergencies, such as hurricanes, tropical cyclones, heavy rains and drought.
For more insight on the global temperature spike and a look ahead to weather trends for the rest of the year, UN News’s Nancy Sarkis spoke to Dr. Omar Baddour, who’s Chief of Climate Monitoring at WMO in Geneva.
4.6
9090 ratings
Average global temperatures reached record levels on land and sea last month, the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Monday.
The WMO announcement follows a report from the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service declaring record global temperatures that extended into the first week of July, breaking the previous record set in August 2016.
There’s little doubt among UN scientists that higher-than-normal temperatures will come at a cost, with negative impacts expected in fishing grounds and knock-on climate emergencies, such as hurricanes, tropical cyclones, heavy rains and drought.
For more insight on the global temperature spike and a look ahead to weather trends for the rest of the year, UN News’s Nancy Sarkis spoke to Dr. Omar Baddour, who’s Chief of Climate Monitoring at WMO in Geneva.
7,756 Listeners
4,275 Listeners
370 Listeners
292 Listeners
43 Listeners
14 Listeners
23 Listeners
6 Listeners
9 Listeners
4 Listeners
16 Listeners
373 Listeners
308 Listeners
144 Listeners
2,518 Listeners
3 Listeners
1,077 Listeners
15 Listeners
4 Listeners
9 Listeners
0 Listeners
64 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
11 Listeners
408 Listeners
99 Listeners
4 Listeners
3 Listeners
222 Listeners
163 Listeners
8 Listeners