May Was the World’s Second-Hottest on Record, EU Scientists Say

BRUSSELS, June 10 (Reuters) – ⁠The ⁠world has just ⁠experienced the second-hottest May since records began, ​as climate change and the developing El Niño weather pattern ‌conspired to push up ‌average land and sea temperatures, the European ⁠Union’s Copernicus ⁠Climate Change Service (C3S) said on Wednesday.

• The hottest ​May on record was in 2024, in records going back to 1940.

• The average global temperature last month was ​1.42 degrees Celsius above the average in 19th-century pre-industrial ⁠times.

• ⁠Western Europe experienced one ⁠of ​the most severe heatwaves ever recorded so early in the ​year.

• C3S ⁠says the extreme heat in Europe was in line with scientists’ expectations of how climate change will affect the world’s fastest-warming continent.

• Parts of the Pacific ⁠Ocean recorded exceptionally high temperatures as it transitions towards El ⁠Nino conditions.

• Extreme weather last month included fatal floods in China and Turkey.

• The El Niño weather pattern is expected to form in the coming months and to fuel extreme weather around the world.

• El Niño naturally occurs every two to seven years, when weakening trade ⁠winds result in warmer waters in the eastern Pacific. The result tends to be higher global temperatures, and disrupted rainfall, meaning drought in some ​regions, heavy rains in others.

(Reporting by Kate Abnett; ​Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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