Three Out of the Past Five Julys Were the Hottest on Record

By Johnny Wood, Senior Writer, Formative Content, World Economic Forum (Public License)

  • July temperatures in 2016, 2019, and 2020 were the hottest ever.
  • The last fully intact ice shelf in Canadian Arctic collapsed in July’s heatwave.
  • Climate change could double the area of central Europe affected by severe drought by the second half of the century.

The July just gone was the third-hottest ever recorded, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service. This isn’t the result of a one-off heatwave or freak weather front, but part of an alarming trend that has seen three of the hottest July months ever recorded – peaking in 2016, followed by 2019 – occurring within the past five years.

Have you read?

  • A climate scientist explains what the melting Arctic means for the world
  • The shrinking Arctic ice protects us all. It’s time to act
  • 2020 is predicted to be the hottest year on record, according to NASA

June 2020 saw the joint-hottest average temperatures for this month, together with 2019. Both Junes had average global temperatures 0.5C above the 1981-2010 average.

For more temperate parts of the world, hotter summers are concerning. But what happens when summers get hotter in already very hot places?

Too hot to survive without air conditioning

This summer, Iraq’s capital Baghdad has endured some of the hottest days ever, with temperatures in excess of 50C, during a heatwave that has hit much of the Middle East. While the region is used to hot weather, countries including Israel and Lebanon have experienced unusual heat extremes, a sign of things to come as climate change continues to heat up the planet.

Humans could face a future that’s too hot to survive without air conditioning. Exposure to extreme heat can stress the body to the point where organs shut down, presenting potentially life threatening conditions for many people living in developing countries.

But hot weather is only part of the climate crisis story.

Warming temperatures make extreme weather events, such as floods, storms and droughts, both more likely and potentially more intense.

Warming temperatures could make extreme droughts as much as seven times more likely, according to new research. This means the area of cropland affected by extreme drought across central Europe could double in the second half of this century, to more than 40 million hectares (approximately 400,000 square kilometres), the Guardian reported.

Using precipitation and temperature data from records from as far back as 1766 to inform climate change computer models, researchers from the UFZ-Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research in the German city of Leipzig forecast that moderate reductions in greenhouse gas emissions could reduce the drought-affected area of central Europe by 40%.

Sinking islands

In the icy wilds of remote northern Canada, the threat of droughts isn’t a consideration, but the region is no less affected by climate change.

At the periphery of Ellesmere Island sits the Milne Ice Shelf, the last fully intact ice shelf in the Canadian Arctic. July’s extreme heat caused two-fifths of this natural wonder to break up in just two days.

“This was the largest remaining intact ice shelf, and it’s disintegrated, basically,” Luke Copland, glaciologist at Canada’s University of Ottawa, told Reuters, explaining that summer temperatures in the Canadian Arctic this year climbed 5C above the 30-year average.

“You feel like you’re on a sinking island chasing these features, and these are large features. It’s not as if it’s a little tiny patch of ice you find in your garden.”

Infographic: Lowest Arctic Ice Cover for July in Recorded History | Statista
Infographic: Lowest Arctic Ice Cover for July in Recorded History | Statista

Extreme July temperatures have hit the entire Arctic region, which scientists say is warming more than twice as fast as the rest of the planet. The 2020 summer melt produced the lowest recorded ice cover for the month of July since records began in 1981.

While the impact of global warming is clear to see, it’s not too late to curb emissions and tackle the climate crisis, but urgent action is needed to accelerate the journey toward net-zero emissions.

12 Innovative and Surprising Solutions for Saving Our Seas

Photo by James Thornton on Unsplash

By Alexander Berry, Global Leadership Fellow, World Economic Forum (Public License)

  • The Ocean is critical to protecting the natural world as well as human life.
  • Digital platform Uplink is announcing it’s Ocean Cohort of 12 innovations tackling the biggest issues facing our seas.
  • Solutions from six continents tackle a range of challenges, from freight shipping and illegal fishing, to plastic pollution and the degradation of precious underwater reef habitats.

The Ocean is critical to protecting the natural world and preserving the futures of the billions of people who rely on it for their survival. It’s so important, the United Nations selected Life Below Water as one of its 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) key for achieving a better and more sustainable future for all.

Life Below Water also inspired the first mission for entrepreneurs and change-makers developing new innovations and solutions through UpLink, a digital platform for scaling innovation and driving progress toward the SDGs.

12 of these Uplink innovators recently presented their ideas to a panel of experts and judges from across the industry at the World Economic Forum’s Virtual Ocean Dialogues. Their solutions tackle challenges from freight shipping and illegal fishing to plastic pollution and the degradation of precious underwater reef habitats.

Whether you are in Malaysia, Brazil, the US, Portugal, Fiji or Palau and you have a solution to an ocean issue, UpLink gives you the opportunity to connect to a global community that can help you.”

—Kristian Teleki, Director, Friends of Ocean Action

The World Economic Forum and Uplink will work extensively with the cohort over the next 4 months to scale the innovators’ impact, highlighting their work through social media, presenting them at ocean-focused events, and introducing them to experts and potential funders who can accelerate their ideas.

UpLink is on a mission to surface and accelerate ocean innovators from around the world. Here is the first cohort answering the call:

  1. Cubex Global – This digital marketplace for sea freight can maximize empty shipping container space while simultaneously protecting the planet with a more sustainable approach to ocean transport.
  2. Oceanium – This innovative biotech start-up is developing products like biopackaging from sustainably-farmed seaweed.
  3. Recyglo – This waste management and data analytics platform tackles plastic pollution at the source across southeast Asia.
  4. Madiba & Nature – These innovators recycle plastic waste and inspire entrepreneurs in communities across Cameroon.
  5. Unseenlabs – This special maritime surveillance service is breaking new ground in the fight against illegal fishing.
  6. OLSPS – This analytics company is preventing illegal fishing through a fishery data management system that can record and report marine and vessel-based information.
  7. Global Coralition – A coral reef restoration group using art as a vehicle to help alleviate poverty, implement water and waste solutions, and empower communities to activate grassroots climate change action.
  8. Life Out Of Plastic – A clean-up campaign that empowers citizens to take action against plastic pollution.
  9. Plastic LOOP – Innovators reducing plastic in dumpsites by formalizing waste picking.
  10. The FlipFlopi Project – The world’s first sailing boat made entirely from waste plastic, created to bring attention to the problems of single-waste plastic.
  11. Seafood Commons – A collaboration for the transparent and sustainable distribution of seafood worldwide.
  12. Pinovo – A zero-emission circular sandblasting system that prevents paint-based microplastics on rigs (and other marine assets) from entering the ocean.