Atmospheric Science Letters (Sep 2024)

Will 2024 be the first year that global temperature exceeds 1.5°C?

  • Nick J. Dunstone,
  • Doug M. Smith,
  • Chris Atkinson,
  • Andrew Colman,
  • Chris Folland,
  • Leon Hermanson,
  • Sarah Ineson,
  • Rachel Killick,
  • Colin Morice,
  • Nick Rayner,
  • Melissa Seabrook,
  • Adam A. Scaife

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.1254
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 9
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Global mean near surface temperature change is the key metric by which our warming climate is monitored and for which international climate policy is set. At the end of each year the Met Office issues a global mean temperature forecast for the coming year. Following on from the new record in 2023, we predict that 2024 will likely (76% chance) be a new record year with a 1‐in‐3 chance of exceeding 1.5°C above pre‐industrial. Whilst a one‐year temporary exceedance of 1.5°C would not constitute a breach of the Paris Agreement target, our forecast highlights how close we are now to this. Our 2024 forecast is primarily driven by the strong warming trend of +0.2°C/decade (1981–2023) and secondly by the lagged warming effect of a strong tropical Pacific El Niño event. We highlight that 2023 itself was significantly warmer than the Met Office DePreSys3 forecast, with much of this additional observed warming coming from the southern hemisphere, the cause of which requires further understanding.

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