Toronto just broke another all-time weather record and the trend is concerning

Mar 7 2024, 7:16 pm

Last month, Toronto broke another weather record, as February marked the ninth month in a row with record-breaking temperatures, according to new data from Copernicus, the European Union’s climate monitoring service.

Scientists revealed that February was 1.77°C warmer than the pre-industrial average for the month and 0.81°C above 1991-2020 levels. The global average for the past year — specifically between March 2023 and February 2024 — was the hottest in recorded history, at 1.56°C above pre-industrial levels.

The latest record is just another sombre reminder of the impacts of human-caused global warming that are currently being exacerbated by El Niño, a climate pattern that describes the unusual warming of surface waters in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean.

“El Niño likely played a critical role in February’s warm. Persistent upper-level ridges over Central Canada — a hallmark of strong El Niño winters — created favourable conditions for above-seasonal temperatures,” The Weather Network wrote on Saturday.

According to the weather agency, Toronto Pearson International Airport finished February with an average temperature of 0.2°C, which shattered the previous all-time warmest average February temperature of -0.2°C back in 2017.

“The drumbeat of warm temperature records is also a glaring example of our changing climate. Sea surface temperatures are running at summertime levels across much of the Atlantic Ocean,” the report reads.

“The world just experienced its hottest 12-month period on record. Warm temperature extremes are more likely as the atmosphere’s baseline temperatures continue to rise.”

Kimia Afshar MehrabiKimia Afshar Mehrabi

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