By 2019, it is definitely the second-warmest year on record

2019 is definitely one of the hottest years on record, according to a new report from the American space agency, NASA. in The last five years, according to th

By 2019, it is definitely the second-warmest year on record

2019 is definitely one of the hottest years on record, according to a new report from the American space agency, NASA.

in The last five years, according to the latest research and also the hottest since the start of the measurements, or to write to NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Previously, NU.nl on the basis of the first, studies show that by 2019 is on track to be one of the warmest years ever.

The development is in an extreme case, it is not a strong El Nino was in. This means that the measurements are a strong indication of a global increasing of the temperature inside.

The average temperature in 2019, it was about a 1.1 degree above the average of the period 1850-1900, and before the people on a large scale, the fossil fuels were burned.

The temperature is in 2016, with the hottest years ever recorded are only a fraction of the above that, by 2019. That same year, El Niño is a large amount of heat from the Pacific Ocean into the atmosphere.

even Though the measurements until the mid-nineteenth century, began to leave the ice cores show that the current temperatures for the last 100 000 years ago have been achieved. In addition, the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere are as high as they were millions of years ago, when the sea level is about 15 to 20 feet high.

In all the 60 seconds of The warming up of the earth, This was the warmest decade since measurements

Scientists have warned that if the global warming of the earth over a 1.5 degree true, this could have a severe impact on the hundreds of millions of people.

"The last decade has been, without a doubt, the hottest decade on record and the first decade of a temperature that is higher than that in the latter part of the nineteenth century," said NASA scientist Gavin Schmidt, at The Guardian.

"It's important to note that all of the evidence from multiple, independent data sets shows that the world is warming, and that this is driven by human activity, and it is clear that the impact will be felt."

Date Of Update: 16 January 2020, 01:00
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