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The latest report from the Copernicus Climate Change Service shows that Europe’s surface temperatures are rising faster than the global average, with 2024 being Europe’s warmest year on record and experiencing serious impacts from extreme weather and climate change. The report also highlights widespread heat stress, record-breaking temperatures, decreasing cold conditions, and increasing extreme weather events across Europe, emphasizing the urgent need for adaptation and mitigation strategies to prevent further warming and build greater resilience.
Anomalies in precipitation patterns and temperatures across Europe appear to be accelerating.
The latest report from the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) also shows that Europe’s surface temperatures are rising faster than the global average.
Copernicus is the Earth observation component of the European Union’s space program.
See Also:What 485 Million Years of Climate History Tell Us About Today’s CrisisIn its paper, compiled in collaboration with the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), researchers reported that 2024 was Europe’s warmest year on record.
“This report highlights that Europe is the fastest-warming continent and is experiencing serious impacts from extreme weather and climate change,” added WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo.
Annual sea surface temperatures across Europe and the Mediterranean Sea reached their highest level ever recorded: 21.5 °C, 1.2 °C above average. European lakes also reached unprecedented temperatures.
The European State of the Climate 2024 report further highlighted widespread global heat stress.
Sixty percent of Europe experienced more days than average with at least intense heat stress, defined by perceived temperatures exceeding 32 °C.
Moreover, annual temperatures reached record highs across nearly half of Europe.
Eastern and southeastern Europe experienced anomalous heat, with the latter region enduring the longest recorded heatwave.
Heat stress significantly affected key olive oil-producing areas in the Mediterranean, including Greece, Turkey and parts of Spain and Italy.
Italy, Croatia, Greece and western Turkey reported a record number of tropical nights, reaching 23. Tropical nights occur when minimum temperatures do not fall below 20 °C.
While less frequent than in recent years, parts of southern Spain and Southern Portugal faced extreme heat stress days, with peak temperatures exceeding 46 °C.
In mid-August, sea temperatures peaked at 28.7 °C, particularly in the Adriatic, Ligurian and Gulf of Lion, bordering northeastern Spain and the South of France.
This was classified as a severe marine heatwave, coinciding with intense heatwaves on land in critical olive-growing areas of Italy, France and Croatia.
“Heat stress days and tropical nights are increasing in Europe,” the report stated. “2024 saw the second-highest number of heat stress days and tropical nights on record.”
“Averaged over Europe, this meant nearly a month of at least strong heat stress and around 12 tropical nights, with variations across the continent, particularly in southeastern Europe, which saw record-breaking numbers of both,” the report added.
Conversely, days of unusually cold conditions reached a record low in Europe during 2024.
The area experiencing sub-zero temperatures continued to shrink. According to the report, 2024 recorded the most significant area ever with fewer than 90 days of frost.
See Also:New Research Sheds Light on Changing Nature of DroughtsAll glaciers in Europe continued losing ice, with those in the Alps shrinking by 22 to 93 percent compared to 1970.
Throughout 2024, significant events and alterations were observed in rainfall, river levels, and flooding, with Western Europe experiencing one of its wettest years.
Extreme flooding increased in 2024, notably Storm Boris in central and eastern Europe and the particularly devastating storm Dana in Spain at the end of October.
During this period, Valencia broke rainfall records for one‑, six‑, and 12-hour intervals within a few days.
Storm Boris caused record floods across eight countries, affecting 8,500 kilometers of rivers.
Amid such complex conditions, wildfires significantly impacted areas experiencing prolonged dry weather.
Near Athens, Greece, a fire covering 11,000 hectares evacuated 16,000 residents in August.
In northern and central Portugal, high temperatures combined with dry conditions and strong winds in September caused a record number of wildfires, burning 110,000 hectares in a week.
The devastation in Portugal alone accounted for 32 percent of all burnt land in Europe in 2024.
The European report was published shortly after the United Nations’ Emissions Gap Report, which predicts that global surface temperatures could rise 3.1 °C above pre-industrial levels by the end of the century under current conditions.
The European report also highlights the increasing damage and costs caused by climate change and extreme weather events.
Recent research by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research projects that global climate-related costs could exceed $38 (€33) trillion by 2049.
“The 2024 report reveals that almost one-third of the river network exceeded high flood thresholds, and heat stress continues to increase in Europe, highlighting the importance of building greater resilience,” said Florence Rabier, director-general at the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), a key partner of Copernicus.
Rabier also emphasized how information provided by Copernicus and WMO supports adaptation and mitigation strategies.
“Fifty-one percent of European cities now have a dedicated climate adaptation plan,” Rabier remarked.
Saulo, from the WMO, added that Europe must continue its efforts to prevent further warming.
“Every additional fraction of a degree of temperature rise matters because it accentuates the risks to our lives, economies and planet,” she said. “Adaptation is essential.”
“WMO and its partners are intensifying efforts to strengthen early warning systems and climate services to help decision-makers and society become more resilient,” Saulo concluded. “We are making progress but must move further, faster and together.”
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