← NewsAll
Canada news is currently paused for latest updates. We'll resume retrieval when enough requests come in.
2025 was one of the hottest years on record.
Summary
European climate data report 2025 as the third-warmest year, about 1.47°C above pre-industrial levels, and scientists link widespread extreme heat that year to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.
Content
Data coordinated by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) and other organizations found 2025 ranked as the third-warmest year on record. ECMWF reported 2025 at about 1.47°C above the 1850–1900 pre-industrial reference. Scientists and reporting agencies discussed the year because its extreme heat affected multiple regions and was linked to human-caused greenhouse gas emissions. Analyses from several groups were used to compare years and examine regional impacts.
Key facts:
- ECMWF reported 2025 as roughly 1.47°C above the 1850–1900 average, placing it third behind 2024 and 2023.
- Other organizations, including Berkeley Earth, reached similar rankings though exact decimal values differ.
- Scientists linked the year’s extreme heat to human-caused climate change and noted regional impacts, including heatwaves, strained health services and a rapid analysis that associated the heat with more than 1,500 deaths.
- La Niña was cited as a moderating influence in 2025 (though still described as unusually warm for a La Niña year), and forecasters indicate La Niña may shift toward neutral conditions soon.
Summary:
The reports show 2025 was among the warmest years on record and was associated with widespread extreme-heat events and documented health and infrastructure impacts in multiple regions. La Niña is identified as a factor that tempered global temperatures in 2025, and forecasts suggesting a move to neutral conditions leave the potential for different global temperature trends later this year.
