A recent report has highlighted the impact of climate change, revealing that the world experienced an average of 26 more days of extreme heat over the past 12 months. This increase in abnormal warmth, which would likely not have occurred without human-induced climate change, was noted by scientists on Tuesday. The analysis was conducted by World Weather Attribution, the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, and Climate Central. The average person on Earth experienced this record-shattering warmth, emphasizing the widespread effect of global warming.
The world had about 26 more days of extreme heat over the last 12 months because of climate change. 🌡️ That’s according to a new analysis from scientists at World Weather Attribution, the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, and @ClimateCentral https://t.co/vLvrsOjnR9
Over the past year of record-shattering warmth, the average person on Earth experienced 26 more days of abnormally high temperatures than they otherwise would have, were it not for human-induced climate change, scientists said Tuesday. https://t.co/RVI2ieLHYp
Climate change caused 26 extra days of extreme heat in last year: report https://t.co/DWWnpBYPop
Since last May, the average person experienced 26 more days of abnormal warmth than they would have without global warming, a new analysis found. https://t.co/mRB89mQG2U
#ClimateChange caused 26 extra days of extreme heat globally https://t.co/3R2Nj9YXMI
The world experience an average of 26 more days of extreme heat over the last 12 months that would probably not have occurred without climate change, a report said on Tuesday. https://t.co/uMp8sDGuXS
I have yet to see any data showing this claim is true: As climate changes exacerbates extreme heat... https://t.co/VQE5Sg8ymS https://t.co/U1OQ2NwjzR
This extreme heat is occurring in a world that is quickly warming due to greenhouse gases, which come from the burning of fossil fuels like oil, gas and coal. #ClimateEmergency https://t.co/ycb0jMSEEI