Climate Change: According to meteorology, 2024 was the hottest year so far. In their data, such a hot year had never come before..
Climate Change: According to meteorology, the year 2024 was the hottest year till now. In their data, such a hot year has never come before. The department said that in these three hundred and sixty-five days, on average, there has been 41 days of extreme heat.
Climate Change: The Meteorological Department has released a report on the earth’s weather in which this has been revealed. This report has attributed climate change to the increasing heat and due to this the average temperature of the earth is also increasing continuously. Experts have also issued a warning regarding this.
Continued 41 days of extreme heat
The ill effects of climate change are being seen all over the world. A second report has also indicated in this direction, which has revealed that the world has to endure an average of 41 days more extreme heat in 2024 due to climate change.
2024 ended as the hottest year
Climate Change: Sources from the European climate agency Copernicus say that 2024, which has ended as the hottest year ever, is the first year when the global average temperature will be 1.5 degrees Celsius higher than pre-industrial levels.
An average of 41 days
Climate Central and World Weather Attribution (WWA) are two groups of climate scientists who have reported in their annual review report that the world has experienced an average of 41 days more terrible heat in 2024.
The impact of this was most felt on small island developing countries where people have had to endure more than 130 additional hot days.
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Extreme weather events
In the year 2024, 219 such events were identified which have been called extreme weather events and after studying 29 of them, scientists found that at least more than three and a half thousand people died and millions of people were displaced in 26 extreme weather events caused by climate change.
Warning of the report
The report warns that ‘the number of people killed in incidents arising from intense extreme weather due to climate change this year is likely to be in hundreds of thousands.’