Recent data and reports indicate that Earth is reacting more strongly to greenhouse gases, leading to record warmth and extreme temperatures affecting a large portion of the world's population. El Niño is intensifying, contributing to the rising temperatures and unusual weather patterns. The impact of climate change is evident in the form of heat waves, coral bleaching, and changes in ocean color. The combination of a strong El Niño in the Pacific Ocean and a shift in temperatures in the Indian Ocean is expected to bring intense heat, drought, and wildfires to Southeast Asia and Australia in 2024. The past 12 months have been the hottest on record, with 99% of the world's population experiencing above-average warmth. The oceans have been record warm due to human-caused climate change and other natural factors. These extreme conditions are leading to concerns about the future, with reports indicating that young people are choosing not to have children due to climate fears.
Young People Choosing Not to Have Children Because of Climate Fears This is a result of systematic abuse. Where 95% of people live the change in temperatures is an undetecable .07c https://t.co/3dqG5CVPn4
El Niño and other natural factors are responsible for the unusual weather in 2023 but WaPo @matthewcappucci can't give up the emissions-driven climate hoax: "Rising ocean temperatures because of human-caused climate change." Oceans are essentially entirely warmed by the Sun and… https://t.co/ovssQzjyGy https://t.co/LJkTZ7PdiI
Our oceans have been record warm over the last three months due to human-caused climate change and an (unlucky) combination of other factors (e.g., La Niña to El Niño, atmospheric circulation forcing) Data via @NOAA ERSSTv5 averaged over August-October: https://t.co/V8F2MhaASY https://t.co/t3YQicsYor
Intense heat and drought – and wildfires – may be coming to Southeast Asia and Australia in 2024 because of the combined effects of a strong El Niño in the Pacific Ocean and a strong shift in temperatures in the Indian Ocean. https://t.co/nuM2atRx3q
The past 12 months have been the hottest on record, with 99% of the world’s population experiencing above-average warmth https://t.co/tave376rzl
El Niño is getting stronger and that's already making Earth hotter https://t.co/8qVZ4bwl0R
Climate Fact Check: October 2023 Edition https://t.co/yWm09YEKax
Scientists have compared this year's climate-change fallout to "a disaster movie" - soaring temperatures, fierce wildfires, powerful storms and devastating floods - and new data is now revealing just how exceptional the global heat has been. https://t.co/3FCe8ovGun
In the last year, about 90 percent of the world’s population experienced at least 10 days of extreme temperatures that were very strongly affected by climate change. https://t.co/1Ha8GjntSy
The past 12 months have been the hottest on record, with 99% of the world’s population experiencing above-average warmth https://t.co/SN03smezkU
Intense heat and drought – and wildfires – may be coming to Southeast Asia and Australia in 2024 because of the combined effects of a strong El Niño in the Pacific Ocean and a strong shift in temperatures in the Indian Ocean. https://t.co/lAZvOS7MXV
Earth has warmest October on record, new data shows https://t.co/m4rjZsRJrn
Climate Change is Affecting the Color of the Ocean #climatechange #oceancolor https://t.co/PBSLJLsydC https://t.co/mHuK26iVk1
As sea surface temperatures rise above normal owing to climate change, satellite data is being used to map out coral bleaching episodes caused by rising ocean warmth. Find out how. #mapping #coralbleach https://t.co/Jdm9aKaLOq https://t.co/D4BwLTttxl
During the last 12 months, about 1 in 4 people experienced a climate change–driven heat wave at least five days long. https://t.co/1Ha8GjntSy
El Niño is now ‘strong’ but acting strangely. What that means. - The Washington Post https://t.co/nKnSArDPrp
Earth reacts to greenhouse gases more strongly than we thought https://t.co/OmPUdhggX4