
Jenna Ladd | November 27, 2017
This week’s On The Radio segment discusses how September 2017 set high heat records all over the world.
Transcript: September 2017 was the planet’s fourth warmest September since record-keeping began in 1880.
This is the Iowa Environmental Focus.
Warmer-than-usual temperatures were recorded across most of the world’s land and ocean surfaces during September this year, despite the absence of an El Niño effect. El Niño events typically bring warmer weather because they cause the ocean to release warm air into the atmosphere. September 2015 is the warmest on record, with September 2016 and 2014 trailing close behind.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s September global climate report noted record high temperatures in many of the world’s oceans and in parts of Africa and Asia. The hottest temperature in the Southern Hemisphere was 109 degrees Fahrenheit on September 27th in Birdsville, Australia. In the northern hemisphere, temperatures soared to 123 degrees Fahrenheit on September 3rd in Mitribah, Kuwait.
So far, 2017 is on track to become the second hottest year on NOAA’S 138-year record.
For more information and to read the September global climate report in full, visit iowa-environmental-focus-dot-org.
From the UI Center for Global and Regional Environmental Research, I’m Betsy Stone.