2017 likely to be among top three hottest years on record: WMO report
The year 2017 is expected to be the warmest year without a warming El Nino, Xinhua quoted the global weather office as saying.
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New Delhi: The phenomenon of climate change is making its magnanimous presence felt in a larger way, every day, every month.
Loss of biodiversity, degrading ecosystem, ocean warming and the melting of ice sheets has the world's biggest nations pondering over effective ways to curb the phenomenon.
With 2016 being declared as the hottest year on record, a report by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) has revealed that global land and ocean temperatures in 2017 will likely end among the three warmest years on record.
The year 2017 is expected to be the warmest year without a warming El Nino, Xinhua quoted the global weather office as saying.
"The first 11 months of the year were the third warmest on record, behind 2016 and 2015, with much-warmer-than-average conditions engulfing much of the world's land and ocean surfaces," WMO media officer Clare Nullis was quoted as saying.
She said the source of the data is the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) which said that Arctic and Antarctic sea ice coverage remained at near record lows.
WMO senior scientist Omar Baddour said, "What is more important than the ranking of an individual year is the overall, long-term trend of warming since the late 1970s, and especially this century. Along with rising temperatures, we are seeing more extreme weather with huge socio-economic impacts."
During November 2017, warmer-than-average temperatures dominated across much of the world's land and ocean surfaces, with the most notable temperature departures from average across the Northern Hemisphere.
(With IANS inputs)
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