For the second year in a row, record-high global surface temperatures were set in 2024, according to all six global temperature datasets assessed in this report (Berkeley Earth, GISTEMP, HadCRUT5, the NOAA Merged Land Ocean Global Surface Temperature Analysis [NOAAGlobalTemp], ERA5, and the Japanese Reanalysis for Three Quarters of a Century [JRA-3Q]). The last time consecutive years set records was in 2015 and 2016 when a strong El Niño similarly boosted global temperatures. The last 10 years (2015–24) are now the warmest 10 in the instrumental record—warmer than the 2011–20 average—and hence “more likely than not warmer than any multi-century period after the last interglacial period, roughly 125,000 years ago” (Gulev et al. 2021). The increased energy within the climate system is detectable at the top of the atmosphere, with the outgoing longwave radiation anomaly continuing to be above the range of natural variability.....
M. R. Tye, S. Blenkinsop, M. G. Bosilovich, I. Durre, C. Lennard, I. Pinto, A. J. Simmons, and M. Ziese, . Land Surface precipitation extremes [in “State of the Climate in 2024”]
Journal: Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc, Year: 2025, First page: S66, Last page: S69, doi: https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-25-0102.1