
THE past year was the hottest on record, but 2023 is unlikely to hold that dubious honour for long. 2024 is expected to be even hotter, as the El Niño climate pattern in the Pacific Ocean reaches its full strength on top of warming driven by greenhouse gases. “We’ve never had a big El Niño like this on the background of global warming,†says at the Met Office, the UK’s national weather service. “We are really entering an unprecedented situation.â€
According to preliminary numbers from the World Meteorological Organization’s (WMO), global average temperatures in 2023 were about 1.4°C above the pre-industrial average measured between 1850 and 1900. That smashed the previous record from 2016 by more than 0.1°C. “That’s a big jump, equivalent to five years of global warming,†says Scaife.
Factors that made 2023 so hot are likely to push the dial even further next year, possibly raising the annual average above the totemic 1.5°C target for the first time. (Omar Baddour at the WMO says one dataset suggests temperatures in 2023 may have exceeded 1.5°C, but the actual number is likely to be lower.)
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The most significant of these factors is global warming driven by the rising concentration of greenhouse gases we are releasing into the atmosphere, which was responsible for about 1.28°C of the rise seen in 2023.
The other major factor is the shift to warmer El Niño conditions in the Pacific after the colder La Niña pattern persisted for three years in a rare “triple dipâ€. Historically, the warming influence of El Niño is greater the year after it first develops, as the anomaly strengthens into December and January. “Usually, El Niño is a synonym of extreme events around the world,†says Baddour.

Other, smaller factors behind 2023’s heat, such as unusually hot temperatures in the North Atlantic Ocean and a volcanic eruption in 2022 that injected water vapour into the upper atmosphere, may also add to next year’s temperatures. “2024 is going to be extreme,†says Scaife.
at the Woodwell Climate Research Center in Massachusetts anticipates “continuing weirdness, surprises and records broken by large margins†in 2024. While we could see the classic impacts of a strong El Niño – for instance, drought and heat in South America, Australia and South-East Asia – unusual combinations of ocean temperatures could affect the jet stream that drives weather in unexpected ways.
“This combination of factors has never occurred in recorded history, so predictions about [the next few months’] weather are particularly murky,†she says.
Still, Francis says she would be very surprised if the global average temperature for all of 2024 rose more than 1.5°C above the pre-industrial average. Scaife says it is hard to say without clear forecasts, but thinks it is possible we see average temperatures next year rise above 1.5°C.
Crossing this threshold for a single year wouldn’t be a breach of the Paris agreement target to keep temperatures below 1.5°C – that would require the 20-year average to rise 1.5°C above the pre-industrial average.
But Scaife points out this has little bearing on the impacts of that heat on people and ecosystems right now. “Whether it slightly tips over or not makes no difference,†he says. “The point is we’re very close.â€