2025 was the world's third-warmest year on record, EU scientists say
2025 saw global temperatures 0.59°C above baseline and Europe 1.17°C higher, driven by greenhouse gases and natural ocean variability, according to Copernicus data.
- The Copernicus Climate Change Service and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts reported that 2025 ranked as the world's third-warmest year in their mid‑January release.
- Scientists attribute the trend to greenhouse gases from burning coal, oil and natural gas, with more than 90% of excess heat absorbed by oceans last year.
- Copernicus records indicate the global average surface air temperature was 14.97°C in 2025, 0.01°C cooler than 2023 and 0.13°C cooler than 2024, while the three-year period 2023–2025 exceeded the 1.5 degrees Celsius threshold.
- Climate-Related disasters cost $115 billion last year, with 23 events exceeding $1 billion and causing 276 deaths; combined polar sea ice extent hit its lowest February level, while Antarctica saw record warmth.
- Laurence Rouil said, `Atmospheric data from 2025 paints a clear picture: human activity remains the dominant driver of the exceptional temperatures we are observing. Atmospheric greenhouse gases have steadily increased over the last 10 years,` at Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service.
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105 Articles
According to data from the EU climate service Copernicus, last year has been the third warmest since the start of the weather records.
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The year 2025 is the third warmest year ever recorded on Earth. According to data published by the European Copernicus Institute, it ranks behind 2023 and 2024. The last 11 years are the warmest ever recorded on the planet. - Climate: The year 2025 is on a worrying podium (Environment).
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