Victoria Masterson, Stephen Hall and Madeleine North
15 de abril de 2025
The World Meteorological Association released its State of the Global Climate 2022 report. Last year, global sea levels reached a record average high. They are now rising twice as fast as in the decade between 1993-2003.
Melting glaciers and a warming ocean were major factors behind the rise the level of sea ice in Antarctica reached a record low last summer. While ocean temperatures were the warmest on record, 58% of the ocean surface experienced a marine heatwave last year.
Alpine glaciers melted faster than ever before, too. Switzerland lost 6% of its glaciers between 2021-2022. Thermometers hit 20˚C in Switzerland on New Year’s Day 2023, beating the previous record, set in 1961, by 3.7˚C.
These records were broken despite 3 years of La Niña, a cooling climatic event. Experts say we will likely see new record highs in the next 2 years as El Niño – and its warming effect – returns.
Watch to learn more about the reason behind the snowless Alps last summer.
Victoria Masterson, Stephen Hall and Madeleine North
15 de abril de 2025
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5 de febrero de 2025
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