Temperatures are Rising

A World of Agreement: Temperatures are Rising; Global Temperature Anomaly (℃)
This line plot shows yearly temperature anomalies from 1880 to 2018, with respect to the 1951-1980 mean, as recorded by NASA, NOAA, the Japan Meteorological Agency, the Berkeley Earth research group, and the Met Office Hadley Centre (UK). Though there are minor variations from year to year, all five temperature records show peaks and valleys in sync with each other. All show rapid warming in the past few decades, and all show the past decade has been the warmest.

Credit: NASA Earth Observatory/Joshua Stevens

The Present is Warmer than the Past

The Present is Warmer than the Past: Difference from 1980-2015 annual mean (℃)
This animated figure shows the seasonal cycle in global temperature anomalies for every month since 1880. Each line shows how much the global monthly temperature was above or below the annual global mean from 1980–2015. The column on the right lists each year when a new global temperature record was set. These seasonal anomalies are drawn from the Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications, version 2 (MERRA-2) model run by NASA’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office.

Credit: NASA Earth Observatory/Joshua Stevens

2018 Was the Fourth Warmest Year on Record

2018 was the fourth hottest year on record. Earth has been warming up for decades. The last five years are the hottest five years on record and the last four were all more than 1 degree Celsius, warmer than the 19th Century average.

A warmer climate contributes to melting polar ice and mountain glaciers, rising sea levels, more severe droughts, longer fire seasons.

NASA and NOAA work together to study the temperature from weather stations, ships and buoys in the ocean, and Antarctic research stations.

Credits:
Kathryn Mersmann (USRA): Lead Producer
Ellen T. Gray (ADNET Systems Inc.): Lead Writer
Patrick Lynch (NASA/GSFC): Lead Public Affairs Officer
Gavin A. Schmidt (NASA/GSFC GISS): Lead Scientist