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Temperature records have been shattering left and right as searing, unrelenting heat has enveloped numerous spots around the planet—from Phoenix, Ariz., to Sanbao, China—during this summer in the Northern Hemisphere.
Breaking high-temperature records is a hallmark of climate change. With more and more heat being trapped in the atmosphere by the greenhouses gases emitted when humans burn fossil fuels, heat records are now set increasingly more often than cold ones.
Climate change leads to longer, stronger and more frequent heat waves. A recent study from the World Weather Attribution group found that some of this summer’s record-setting heat waves would have been “virtually impossible” without climate change. A hot summer of the past is an average one today, and the current hot summers will be considered pretty average in the future.
Extreme heat kills people. In the U.S., it claims more lives than hurricanes, tornadoes and floods—combined. It is particularly dangerous for young children, the elderly, those with health conditions such as asthma and heart disease, those who work outside and the unhoused.
Below is a running list of some of the records that have been set this year.
Local-Level Records
Under the influence of a tenacious heat dome, Phoenix has blown past a record for the longest stretch of days with high temperatures at or above 110 degrees Fahrenheit (43.3 degrees Celsius). As of July 26, that record stood at 27 days. (The previous record, set in 1974, was 18 days.)
Phoenix also tied the record (previously set in 2021) for the most days in a row—six—with a high of at least 115 degrees F (46.1 degrees C). Additionally, the city has tied the record for the most days at or above 115 degrees F within a single year, with 14 days so far in 2023.
And Phoenix hasn’t only sweltered during the day. Nighttime lows hit an all-time high record of 97 degrees F (36.1 degrees C), breaking an earlier peak on July 19. The city has seen a record 17 consecutive days with a low of 90 degrees F (32.2 degrees C) or higher. The previous record of seven days was set twice in 2020.
Miami, Fla., has seen a heat index (a measure that factors in humidity to determine what the temperature feels like to the human body) above 100 degrees F (37.8 degrees C) for 45 days as of July 25, according to local meteorologist Brian McNoldy. This is by far the most days in a row to reach that level. (The previous record, set in 2020, was 32 days.) The city also saw a record 13 consecutive days with a heat index of 106 degrees F (41.1 degrees C) or higher and a record two days in a row where the heat index topped 110 degrees F.
San Angelo, Tex., set an all-time high of 114 degrees F (45.6 degrees C) in June as a heat dome stayed parked over the area for weeks. It was one of many heat records that have broken around the state this summer.
Algiers, the capital of Algeria, set an all-time record high of 119.7 degrees F (48.7 degrees C) on July 23 amid a brutal heat wave affecting areas all around the Mediterranean.
Palermo, the capital of the Italian region of Sicily, hit an all-time record high of 116.6 degrees F (47 degrees C) on July 24, breaking its previous record by more than 3.6 degrees F (two degrees C). Temperature data there extend back to 1791.
Regional and National-Level Records
Sanbao township in China’s Xinjiang Uygur region set the country’s all-time record high temperature of 126 degrees F (52.2 degrees C). And Spain’s Catalonia region had its hottest-ever temperature of 113.7 degrees F (45.4 degrees C).
On July 8 a town in Canada’s Northwest Territories recorded a temperature of 100 degrees F . The location was the farthest north of the 65-degree latitude line where that has ever happened in the Western Hemisphere.
Global Records
On the global scale, the planet saw its hottest June on record this year by a wide margin. And July is expected to be not only the hottest July on record but also the hottest month ever recorded on Earth. The first week of July was also provisionally the hottest week on record for the whole planet.
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