China’s weather agency said last year was its warmest on record. The country is experiencing a surge in extreme weather fueled by climate change.
China is the leading emitter of greenhouse gases, which scientists say are driving global warming. However, Beijing has pledged that its carbon dioxide emissions will peak by 2030 and be brought to net zero by 2060.
On Wednesday night, the China Meteorological Administration announced on its news site that the average national temperature for 2024 was 10.92 degrees Celsius (51.66 Fahrenheit), 1.03 degrees higher than the average. This was “the warmest year since the start of full records in 1961.”
“The top four warmest years ever were the past four years, with all top ten warmest years since 1961 occurring in the 21st century,” it added.
China has already logged its hottest month in the history of observation in July, as well as the hottest August and the warmest autumn on record.
The United Nations said in a year-end message on Monday that 2024 was set to be the warmest year ever recorded worldwide.
Global warming, driven mainly by the burning of fossil fuels, involves rising temperatures and the knock-on effects of all the extra heat in the atmosphere and seas.
Warmer air can hold more water vapour; warmer oceans mean greater evaporation, resulting in more intense downpours and storms.
Impacts are wide-ranging, deadly, and increasingly costly, damaging property and destroying crops.
Dozens killed
In China, dozens of people were killed, and thousands evacuated during floods around the country last year.
In May, a highway in southern China collapsed after days of rain, killing 48 people.
Residents of the southern city of Guangzhou experienced a record-breaking long summer. State media reported 240 days with an average temperature above 22C (71.6F), breaking the record of 234 days set in 1994.
Sichuan, Chongqing, and the middle reaches of the Yangtze River suffered from heat and drought in early autumn.
Globally, 2024 saw deadly flooding in Spain and Kenya, multiple violent storms in the United States and the Philippines, and severe drought and wildfires across South America.
Natural disasters caused $310 billion in economic losses in 2024, Zurich-based insurance giant Swiss Re has said.
The 2015 Paris Climate Accords aimed to limit global warming to below two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and, if possible, to 1.5C.
In November, the World Meteorological Organization reported that the January-September mean surface air temperature was 1.54C above the pre-industrial average, measured between 1850 and 1900.