State of the Global Climate 2025

WMO’s State of the Global Climate report 2025 confirms that 2015-2025 are the hottest 11-years on record, and that 2025 was the second or third hottest year on record, at about 1.43 °C above the 1850-1900 average. Extreme events around the world, including intense heat, heavy rainfall and tropical cyclones, caused disruption and devastation and highlighted the vulnerability of our inter-connected economies and societies.The ocean continues to warm and absorb carbon dioxide. It has been absorbing the equivalent of about eighteen times the annual human energy use each year for the past two decades. Annual sea ice extent in the Arctic was at or near a record low, Antarctic sea ice extent was the third lowest on record, and glacier melt continued unabated, according to the report.For the first time, the report includes the Earth’s energy imbalance as one of the key climate indicators.

World Meteorological Organization

#WMO #WorldMeteorologicalOrganization

State of the Global Climate 2025 March 23, 2026

- 2015-2025 hottest 11 years on record
- Earth’s energy imbalance highest in 65-year record
- The ocean has been absorbing about 18x the annual human energy use each year for the past two decades
- Extreme weather impacts millions and costs billions

https://wmo.int/publication-series/state-of-global-climate/state-of-global-climate-2025

#ClimateScience #climatechange #ClimateBreakdown #ClimateDisruption #globalWarming #globalHeating #ExtremeWeather #polycrisis

State of the Global Climate 2025

WMO’s State of the Global Climate report 2025 confirms that 2015-2025 are the hottest 11-years on record, and that 2025 was the second or third hottest year on record, at about 1.43 °C above the 1850-1900 average. Extreme events around the world, including intense heat, heavy rainfall and tropical cyclones, caused disruption and devastation and highlighted the vulnerability of our inter-connected economies and societies.The ocean continues to warm and absorb carbon dioxide. It has been absorbing the equivalent of about eighteen times the annual human energy use each year for the past two decades. Annual sea ice extent in the Arctic was at or near a record low, Antarctic sea ice extent was the third lowest on record, and glacier melt continued unabated, according to the report.For the first time, the report includes the Earth’s energy imbalance as one of the key climate indicators.

World Meteorological Organization

State of the Global Climate 2025: WMO Report: Bonus - Why is it so hot in the USA and so darn cold in Canada
https://youtu.be/1mOpfS5AzsA?si=lxYzfFgaTKquYw03

#climate #weather #climatebreakdown #Canada #USA #WMO

State of the Global Climate 2025: WMO Report: Bonus - Why is it so hot in USA and so cold in Canada?

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2026, Climate March Madness

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#ClimateEmergencyInstitute
update March 2026

(I don't care what excuses you make up. You get up your lazy a** RIGHT NOW and you join #climateAction ! We gather outside.)

Dr. #PeterCarter on the U.S. March #heatdome
#WMO State of the #Climate in 2025
suicidal #fossilfuel #subsidies and the insanity of #wars

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=keaA5o_YIvs

#ClimateScience #climatechange #ClimateEmergency #ClimateCrisis #ClimateBreakdown #ClimateDisruption #globalWarming #globalHeating #ExtremeWeather #polycrisis

2026, Climate March Madness

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WMO State of the Global Climate 2025 is out. Check it! WMO confirms that 11 hottest years on record were 2015-2025. Think about that! Last 11 years were the hottest on record. Some think it is good idea to waste energy and resources on bombing bunch of places to secure oil and natural gas, some of the largest reasons for this warming.
https://wmo.int/publication-series/state-of-global-climate/state-of-global-climate-2025

#ClimateChange #WMO #StateOfTheGlobalClimate #EnergyImbalance

State of the Global Climate 2025

WMO’s State of the Global Climate report 2025 confirms that 2015-2025 are the hottest 11-years on record, and that 2025 was the second or third hottest year on record, at about 1.43 °C above the 1850-1900 average. Extreme events around the world, including intense heat, heavy rainfall and tropical cyclones, caused disruption and devastation and highlighted the vulnerability of our inter-connected economies and societies.The ocean continues to warm and absorb carbon dioxide. It has been absorbing the equivalent of about eighteen times the annual human energy use each year for the past two decades. Annual sea ice extent in the Arctic was at or near a record low, Antarctic sea ice extent was the third lowest on record, and glacier melt continued unabated, according to the report.For the first time, the report includes the Earth’s energy imbalance as one of the key climate indicators.

World Meteorological Organization

Ik ben onderweg naar mijn #diplomauitreiking als #mantelzorgmakelaar. Toch leuk om op mijn leeftijd een officieel diploma te krijgen en een heel nieuw vak te beheersen!

Als mantelzorgmakelaar help ik mantelzorgers om de weg te vinden in het zorgaanbod: wat is er nodig, #Wmo? #Wlz? Wat voor aanbieders zijn er? Komen we in aanmerking voor een #Pgb? Waar moeten we dan op letten? Hoe regel ik de zorg voor mijn kind met een beperking?

WMO warns 'ocean warming at record levels & will continue for hundreds, if not thousands, of years'

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#mdr:
".. WMO schlägt Alarm: D. globale Erderwärmung hat sich weiter verschärft. .. Klimabericht zeigt, dass d. Erde .. deutlich mehr Energie aufnimmt als sie abgibt. .. vergangene Jahr war je nach Datensatz d. zweit- oder drittheißeste seit Beginn d. Messungen, mit rund 1,43 Grad über vorindustriellem Niveau... Ozeane speichern d. überschüssige Wärme – m. weitreichenden Folgen."

https://www.mdr.de/wissen/umwelt-klima/wmo-bericht-klimawandel-verschlimmert-sich-100~amp.html

23.3.2026

#Energieungleichgewicht #Erde #Erderwärmung #Klima #Klimakrise #Klimawandel #WMO

WMO warnt vor Energieungleichgewicht der Erde: Klimawandel verschärft sich

Die Erde heizt sich weiter auf: Laut Weltwetterorganisation nimmt der Planet deutlich mehr Energie auf, als er abgibt. Ein neuer Bericht zeigt, wie stark Ozeane, Eis und Böden bereits betroffen sind.

MDR