Current:Home > reviewsClimate change made July hotter for 4 of 5 humans on Earth, scientists find -TruePath Finance
Climate change made July hotter for 4 of 5 humans on Earth, scientists find
View
Date:2025-04-16 07:52:11
Human-caused global warming made July hotter for four out of five people on Earth, with more than 2 billion people feeling climate change-boosted warmth daily, according to a flash study.
More than 6.5 billion people, or 81% of the world’s population, sweated through at least one day where climate change had a significant effect on the average daily temperature, according to a new report issued Wednesday by Climate Central, a science nonprofit that has figured a way to calculate how much climate change has affected daily weather.
“We really are experiencing climate change just about everywhere,” said Climate Central Vice President for Science Andrew Pershing.
Researchers looked at 4,711 cities and found climate change fingerprints in 4,019 of them for July, which other scientists said is the hottest month on record. The new study calculated that the burning of coal, oil and natural gas had made it three times more likely to be hotter on at least one day in those cities. In the U.S., where the climate effect was largest in Florida, more than 244 million people felt greater heat due to climate change during July.
For 2 billion people, in a mostly tropical belt across the globe, climate change made it three times more likely to be hotter every single day of July. Those include the million-person cities of Mecca, Saudi Arabia and San Pedro Sula, Honduras.
The day with the most widespread climate-change effect was July 10, when 3.5 billion people experienced extreme heat that had global warming’s fingerprints, according to the report. That’s different than the hottest day globally, which was July 7, according to the University of Maine’s Climate Reanalyzer.
The study is not peer-reviewed, the gold standard for science, because the month just ended. It is based on peer-reviewed climate fingerprinting methods that are used by other groups and are considered technically valid by the National Academy of Sciences. Two outside climate scientists told The Associated Press that they found the study to be credible.
More than a year ago Climate Central developed a measurement tool called the Climate Shift Index. It calculates the effect, if any, of climate change on temperatures across the globe in real time, using European and U.S. forecasts, observations and computer simulations. To find if there is an effect, the scientists compare recorded temperatures to a simulated world with no warming from climate change and it’s about 2 degrees (1.2 degrees Celsius) cooler to find out the chances that the heat was natural.
“By now, we should all be used to individual heat waves being connected to global warming,” said Princeton University climate scientist Gabriel Vecchi, who wasn’t part of the study. “Unfortunately, this month, as this study elegantly shows, has given the vast majority of people on this planet a taste of global warming’s impact on extreme heat.”
In the United States, 22 U.S. cities had at least 20 days when climate change tripled the likelihood of extra heat, including Miami, Houston, Phoenix, Tampa, Las Vegas and Austin.
The U.S. city most affected by climate change in July was Cape Coral, Florida, which saw fossil fuels make hotter temperatures 4.6 times more likely for the month and had 29 out of 31 days where there was a significant climate change fingerprint.
The farther north in the United States, the less of a climate effect was seen in July. Researchers found no significant effect in places like North Dakota and South Dakota, Wyoming, northern California, upstate New York and parts of Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Heat waves in the U.S. Southwest, the Mediterranean and even China have gotten special analysis by World Weather Attribution finding a climate change signal, but places like the Caribbean and Middle East are having huge climate change signals and not getting the attention, Pershing said. Unlike the other study, this one looked at the entire globe.
___
Follow AP’s climate and environment coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment
___
Follow Seth Borenstein on Twitter at @borenbears
___
Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives support from several private foundations. See more about AP’s climate initiative here. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (63)
Related
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Pop singer Sabrina Carpenter’s music video spurs outrage for using NY Catholic church as a setting
- Critically endangered Sumatran rhino named Delilah gives birth to 55-pound male calf
- An ailing Pope Francis appears at a weekly audience but says he’s not well and has aide read speech
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- 28 White Elephant Gifts for the Win
- Georgia Republicans move to cut losses as they propose majority-Black districts in special session
- Climate contradictions key at UN talks. Less future warming projected, yet there’s more current pain
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Video shows driver collide with parked car, sending cars crashing into Massachusetts store
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Connecticut lawmakers seek compromise on switch to all-electric cars, after ambitious plan scrapped
- Cody Rigsby Offers Advice For a Stress-Free Holiday, “It’s Not That Deep, Boo”
- Rapper Young Thug’s trial on racketeering conspiracy and gang charges begins in Atlanta
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Ransomware attack prompts multistate hospital chain to divert some emergency room patients elsewhere
- Dolly Parton reveals hilarious reason she refuses to learn how to text
- A magnitude 5.1 earthquake hits near Barbados but no damage is reported on the Caribbean island
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Arkansas attorney general rejects wording of ballot measure seeking to repeal state’s abortion ban
Dashcam video shows 12-year-old Michigan boy taking stolen forklift on joyride, police say
Puerto Rico’s famous stray cats will be removed from grounds surrounding historic fortress
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Judge cites handwritten will and awards real estate to Aretha Franklin’s sons
New Mexico creates new council to address cases of missing and slain Native Americans
Alaska landslide survivor says force of impact threw her around ‘like a piece of weightless popcorn’