Earth forecast to have warmest run of years on record

Earth is headed for the hottest decade EVER recorded as alarming Met Office report warns temperatures over the next five years will all be warmer than pre-industrial levels If forecasts are right, decade between 2014 and 2023 will be hottest on record Met Office predicts temps from 2019-2023 will be 1.03C-1.57C higher than past Forecast comes as climate experts around the world release the 2018 report

By Press Association

Published: 17:16 GMT, 6 February 2019 | Updated: 17:44 GMT, 6 February 2019

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The next five years are likely to see temperatures of 1C or more above pre-industrial levels as the Earth experiences its warmest decade on record, the Met Office said.

Average global surface temperatures for 2019 to 2023 are forecast to be between 1.03C and 1.57C above the levels seen before the Industrial Revolution, the experts said.

If temperatures over the next five years are in line with the predictions, it will make the decade between 2014 and 2023 the hottest run of years in records reaching back to 1850.

The next five years are likely to see temperatures of 1C or more above pre-industrial levels as the Earth experiences its warmest decade on record, the Met Office said. Fossil fuel emissions are continuing to cause global warming, experts say (file photo)

The next five years are likely to see temperatures of 1C or more above pre-industrial levels as the Earth experiences its warmest decade on record, the Met Office said. Fossil fuel emissions are continuing to cause global warming, experts say (file photo)

The forecast is being made as climate experts around the world release information on global temperatures in 2018.

The World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said analysis of five leading international datasets showed the global average temperature last year was approximately 1C above pre-industrial levels of 1850-1900.

It means it was the fourth hottest year on record, coming behind only 2016, 2015 and 2017, and making the last four years the warmest recorded.

Professor Adam Scaife, head of long-range prediction at the Met Office, said: '2015 was the first year that global annual average surface temperatures reached 1C above pre-industrial levels, and the following three years have all remained close to this level.

'The global average

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