According to 136 years of US meteorological records, last month was the hottest November since record-keeping began. November is the ninth record hot month of 2015, which will almost certainly – as chances of a frosty and snowy Christmas and New Year’s Eve in much of the planet are close to zero – show this year to break all high temperature records, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.
In news that will surprise almost no one, the planet is record hot https://t.co/Nux8cOFA0Q pic.twitter.com/7AJUgx6ChJ
— ClimateCentral (@ClimateCentral) December 17, 2015
According to a recent report, air temperatures over land across the Arctic region were 1.3 degrees above average in 2015, breaking 115 years of record keeping.
On Saturday, negotiators agreed to curb emissions beyond 2020 and transition to a global clean energy economy after two weeks of tough negotiations marked by disagreements between developed and developing countries.