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2021 was 45th year in a row with a warmer-than-normal global temperature

<i>PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images</i><br/>Firefighters battle the Windy Fire in the Sequoia National Forest in California on September 22
AFP via Getty Images
PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images
Firefighters battle the Windy Fire in the Sequoia National Forest in California on September 22

By Rachel Ramirez

The last 45 years have all been above the 20th century average for global temperature, new data shows, as Earth continues its relentless warming due to heat-trapping fossil fuel emissions.

Twin reports released Thursday from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration found 2021 was the sixth warmest year on record, despite the influence of La Niña, which tends to lead to cooler global temperatures.

Earth’s average temperature, according to the latest findings, is now around 1.1 degrees Celsius above average pre-industrial levels, matching similar findings released earlier this week from the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

The current 1.1-degree global average temperature is 73% of the way to the 1.5-degree threshold scientists warn the planet must stay under to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

“The last seven years have all been more than 1-degree Celsius above the 19th century — and that’s large enough on a planetary scale to start showing up much, much more clearly in local and regional and extreme events,” Gavin Schmidt, a climate scientist at NASA, told CNN. “The global warming is now large enough that it’s an indicator of all those other things that we’re already seeing. So, we’re now seeing global warming quite locally in ways that, a decade ago or maybe 20 years ago, was still unclear.”

2021 brought heat waves and floods that became mass casualty events; rain fell at the summit of Greenland for the first time on record; and a historic drought plagued much of the Western United States and triggered large, destructive wildfires and never-before-seen water shortages.

Almost every corner of the world felt the effects of the rapidly warming planet last year. Schmidt said he expects weather and climate related disasters to carry into 2022, and for global average temperatures to be warmer than 2021.

“We will see instances of extreme precipitation that will break records or see extreme heat waves that will break records. We will see increased wildfires; we will see increases in coastal flooding; we will see increases in sea level; we will see increased mass loss from Greenland and Antarctica,” Schmidt said. “These are very predictable aspects of the climate.”

The reports also conclude that ocean temperatures were record-high in 2021, surpassing the previous record set in 2020. The past seven years have been the warmest seven on record for oceans, according to the latest findings.

Additionally, temperatures in the typically freezing Arctic region continue to warm faster than the rest of the planet, with a rate of warming more than three times faster than the global average, researchers found.

“Global warming is happening, and I always sound like a broken record because we’ve basically broken the climate,” Schmidt said. “We need to keep tracking what’s happening to the planet. And even though it’s doing what we expect, it’s getting warmer because we’ve got more greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. We don’t get any satisfaction as scientists from being proven right on this. We would much rather have been wrong.”

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