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Global Thermometer Breaks Record

✍️ Alexander Verbeek
2 min readNov 21, 2023

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The graph with the red line for 2023 has a completely different pattern than all previous years’ temperature anomalies, spiking upwards at the end.
Global 2m surface temperature anomalies:1940–2023 vs. the 1850–1900 IPCC baseline (source Prof. Eliot Jacobson)

A few days ago, for the first time in recorded history, the global 2m surface temperature breached 2.0 degrees Celsius above the 1850–1900 baseline.

This should have been the banner headline across every major newspaper worldwide, but -no surprises here- the world didn’t pay attention.

Another climate record shattered, scientists and their followers search for expressions to convey their deep concerns, all while the world nonchalantly sleepwalks into an oven set on its surround grill function.

Does this signify a breach of the Paris Agreement’s upper limit?

No, it doesn’t. It may be in the future if we keep pumping more greenhouse gasses into our atmosphere, but what happened now was only a short breaching on the 2 degrees Celsius mark. Even if this persists for a month or a year, it doesn’t categorically breach the established trend line. The possibility of avoiding an infringement on the more stringent 1.5-degree threshold still exists, provided we act decisively.

Does this mean we shouldn’t worry?

No, it means we should continue to worry, and it should motivate us to urgently address the warming of our atmosphere and safeguard the livability of our planet.

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✍️ Alexander Verbeek
✍️ Alexander Verbeek

Written by ✍️ Alexander Verbeek

Writer and public speaker on the beauty and fragility of nature.

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