Skip to content
Tuesday 16 December 2025
  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact
The Frontier
Click to read
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • Health
  • Business & Economy
  • Sports
  • More
    • International
    • Religion
    • Entertainment
    • Info Tech
    • Matilda Showbiz
      • Gists
      • Music
      • Gossips
      • Oga MAT
      • Romance
    • Arts & Culture
    • Environment
    • Opinion
    • Features
    • Epistles of Anthony Kila
    • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
The Frontier
  • News
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Headlines
  • Education
  • International
  • Business & Economy
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Arts & Culture
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Matilda Showbiz
    • Gists
    • Music
    • Gossips
    • Oga MAT
    • Romance
  • Opinion
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade
  • Info Tech
  • Interview
The Frontier
Click to read
Environment
Environment

2023 hottest year ever — UN

The FrontierThe FrontierNovember 30, 2023 3043 Minutes read0

•UN Secretary-General António Guterres

This year is set to be the hottest ever recorded, the UN said today, demanding urgent action to rein in global warming and stem the havoc following in its wake.

The UN’s World Meteorological Organisation warned that 2023 had shattered a whole host of climate records, with extreme weather leaving “a trail of devastation and despair”, reports AFP.

“It’s a deafening cacophony of broken records,” said WMO chief Petteri Taalas.

“Greenhouse gas levels are record high. Global temperatures are record-high. Sea level rise is record high. Antarctic sea ice is record low.”

The WMO published its provisional 2023 State of the Global Climate report as world leaders gathered in Dubai for the UN COP28 climate conference, amid mounting pressure to curb planet-heating greenhouse gas pollution.

United Nations chief Antonio Guterres said the record heat findings “should send shivers down the spines of world leaders”.

The stakes have never been higher, with scientists warning that the ability to limit warming to a manageable level is slipping through humanity’s fingers.

The 2015 Paris Climate Accords aimed to limit global warming to well below two degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels — and 1.5C if possible.

But in its report, the WMO said 2023 data to the end of October showed that this year was already around 1.4C above the pre-industrial baseline.

– ‘Not just statistics’ –

The agency is due to publish its final State of the Global Climate 2023 report in the first half of 2024.

But it said the difference between the first 10 months of this year and 2016 and 2020 — which previously topped the charts as the warmest years on record — “is such that the final two months are very unlikely to affect the ranking”.

The report also showed that the past nine years were the hottest years since modern records began.

“These are more than just statistics,” Taalas said, warning that “we risk losing the race to save our glaciers and to rein in sea level rise”.

“We cannot return to the climate of the 20th century, but we must act now to limit the risks of an increasingly inhospitable climate in this and the coming centuries.”

The WMO warned that the warming El Nino weather phenomenon, which emerged mid-year, was “likely to further fuel the heat in 2024”.

That is because the naturally occurring climate pattern, typically associated with increased heat worldwide, usually increases global temperatures in the year after it develops.

The preliminary report also found that concentrations of the three main heat-trapping greenhouse gases — carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide — reached record-high levels in 2022, with preliminary data indicating that the levels continued to grow this year.

Carbon dioxide levels were 50 per cent higher than in the pre-industrial era, the agency said, meaning that “temperatures will continue to rise for many years to come”, even if emissions are drastically cut.

– ‘Climate chaos’ –

The rate of sea level rise over the past decade was more than twice the rate of the first decade of satellite records (1993-2002), it said.

And the maximum level of Antarctic sea ice this year was the lowest on record.

In fact, it was a million square kilometres less than the previous record low at the end of the southern hemisphere winter, the WMO said — an area larger than France and Germany combined.

Meanwhile, glaciers in North America and Europe again suffered an extreme melt season, with Swiss glaciers losing 10 percent of their ice volume in the past two years alone, the report showed.

Dramatic socio-economic impacts accompany such climate records, experts say, including dwindling food security and mass displacement.

“This year we have seen communities around the world pounded by fires, floods and searing temperatures,” UN chief Guterres said in a video message.

He called on the leaders gathered in Dubai to commit to dramatic measures to rein in climate change, including phasing out fossil fuels and tripling renewable energy capacity.

“We have the roadmap to limit the rise in global temperature to 1.5C and avoid the worst of climate chaos,” he said.

“But we need leaders to fire the starting gun at COP28 on a race to keep the 1.5 degree limit alive.”

Tags
everhottestUNyear
FacebookTwitterWhatsAppLinkedInEmailLink
Previous post Guber election: We’re self-sponsored – Nasarawa protesters counter APC
next post Tinubu confirms Adepoju substantive comptroller general of immigration
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Environment

Oworonshoki Lagos demolition rendered my family homeless – Widow cries out

December 8, 20250
Environment

Senate summons ministers over lead poisoning in Lagos, Ogun

December 5, 20250
Environment

Weather forecast: NiMet predicts 3-day sunshine, cloudiness from today

December 1, 20250
Load more
Read also
Inside Akwa Ibom Today

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 20250
Headlines

HAPPENING NOW: Tinubu, service chiefs in closed-door meeting in Aso Villa

December 15, 20250
Headlines

State of Emergency: Supreme Court judgment empowers President to dismantle constitutionally elected institutions – PDP warns

December 15, 20250
Politics

PDP to form alliance if reconciliation fails – Former Governor Sule Lamido

December 15, 20250
News

Senate condemns multiple budgets, raises FIRS revenue target to N35 trillion for 2026

December 15, 20250
News

2027: Chief Justice of Nigeria cautions judges on handling of election-related cases

December 15, 20250
International

Canada rolls out express entry pathway for migrant doctors

December 15, 20250
Load more

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

HAPPENING NOW: Tinubu, service chiefs in closed-door meeting in Aso Villa

December 15, 2025

State of Emergency: Supreme Court judgment empowers President to dismantle constitutionally elected institutions – PDP warns

December 15, 2025

PDP to form alliance if reconciliation fails – Former Governor Sule Lamido

December 15, 2025

Senate condemns multiple budgets, raises FIRS revenue target to N35 trillion for 2026

December 15, 2025

2027: Chief Justice of Nigeria cautions judges on handling of election-related cases

December 15, 2025

inside the Hill top newspaper

0 Comments

HAPPENING NOW: Tinubu, service chiefs in closed-door meeting in Aso Villa

0 Comments

5 burnt to death scooping fuel from fallen tanker

0 Comments

Naira slumps further as dollar scarcity bites harder

0 Comments

BREAKING: Appeal Court sacks Senate Minority Leader, orders election rerun

0 Comments

Follow us

FacebookLike our page
InstagramFollow us
YoutubeSubscribe to our channel
WhatsappContact us
Latest news
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

JUST IN: Appeal Court affirms Finitri’s election as Adamawa governor

December 18, 2023
3

EU urges Nigeria to fast-track electoral reforms, says 2027 elections critical for democracy

October 2, 2025
4

2 Al Jazeera journalists killed in Israeli airstrike on Gaza

August 1, 2024
5

BREAKING: Oyo govt demolishes Yoruba Nation agitators’ building

April 17, 2024
6

Canada, Mexico leaders agree to seek fairer trade deal with US

September 19, 2025
Popular
1

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025
2

Zimbabwe’s Kirsty Coventry elected first woman president of International Olympic Committee

March 21, 2025
3

Mother laments teenage daughter’s third month in Boko Haram custody

December 2, 2025
4

JUST IN: Bandits kill 4 including policemen, abduct 40 others in Zamfara

February 13, 2024
5

Governor Mohammed to Tinubu: Shine your eyes, remove excess baggage in your cabinet

December 15, 2024
6

INSIDE AKWA IBOM TODAY: My family remains intact – Governor Eno responds to trending video •FULL VIDEO

June 1, 2025

About The Frontier

The Frontier is Nigeria’s leading online newspaper. It is published by Okims Media Links Limited headed by Sunny Okim, a veteran journalist who is widely known as The Grandmaster, fondly called so by colleagues and friends for being Nigeria’s pioneer movie journalist.

Most viewed

inside the Hill top newspaper

February 9, 2025

Ondo APC Primary: Appeal Committee confirms receipt of 3 petitions

April 22, 2024

Atiku knocks Tinubu over new fuel subsidy regime

August 20, 2024

Tailor stabs ‘brother’ to death over stabiliser

May 26, 2025

Oil industry sabotage: Minister, NNPCL, Dangote, others take fight before Senate panel

August 7, 2024
Top posts

Categories

  • News3872
  • Politics3303
  • Crime3221
  • International2202
  • Business & Economy1836
  • Sports1823
  • Headlines1788
  • Education1086
  • Matilda Showbiz740
  • Health659
  • Entertainment598
  • Religion370
  • Africa351
  • Environment275
  • Special236
  • Hunger protests in Nigeria224
  • Arts & Culture183
  • Info Tech181
  • Interview150
  • Inside Akwa Ibom Today136
  • Opinion123
  • EyeCare with Dr Priscilia Imade95
  • Advert29
  • Epistles of Anthony Kila19
  • Trends9
  • Local News4

© 2025 The Frontier, Published by Okims Media Links Limited.

designed by winnet services

  • Home
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact