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HomeBBC Top NewsGlobal temperatures dip in 2025 but more heat records on way, scientists...

Global temperatures dip in 2025 but more heat records on way, scientists warn


Mark PoyntingClimate researcher

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images A firefighter, dressed in protective clothing, is silhouetted as they fire a water cannon at a burning house with the sun shining through a hazy sky in the background, in Altadena on 9 January 2025. Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

The California fires of January 2025 were one of the most expensive weather-related disasters in US history

Global temperatures in 2025 did not quite reach the heights of 2024, thanks to the cooling influence of the natural La Niña weather pattern in the Pacific, new data from the European Copernicus climate service and the Met Office shows.

But the last three years were the world’s warmest ever recorded, bringing the planet closer to breaching international climate targets.

Despite natural cooling from La Niña, 2025 was still much warmer than temperatures even a decade ago, as humanity’s carbon emissions continue to heat the planet.

That will inevitably lead to further temperature records – and worsening weather extremes – unless emissions are sharply reduced, scientists warn.

“If we go twenty years into the future and we look back at this period of the mid-2020s, we will see these years as relatively cool,” said Dr Samantha Burgess, deputy director of Copernicus.

The global average temperature in 2025 was more than 1.4C above “pre-industrial” levels of the late 1800s – before humanity started burning large amounts of fossil fuels – according to Copernicus and Met Office data.

Bar chart of global average annual temperatures between 1940 and 2025. The hotter the year, the darker shade of red for the bars. There is a rising trend in the height of the bars and a darkening of reds, indicating greater warming. The last three years are the hottest on record by some margin, slightly above 1.5C of warming in 2024 and slightly below in 2023 ad 2025, according to the European Copernicus climate service.

The precise figures vary slightly between major climate groups, owing mainly to small differences in how the pre-industrial temperature is calculated. But there is no debate about the world’s long-term warming trend.

“We understand very well that if we continue to pump greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, the concentrations of those gases increase in the atmosphere, and the planet responds by warming,” explained Prof Rowan Sutton, director of the Met Office Hadley Centre.

Last year might not have been the hottest on record worldwide but extreme weather events linked to global warming continued.

The Los Angeles fires in January and Hurricane Melissa in October were just two examples of extreme weather that scientists have found were likely fuelled to some extent by climate change.

Egeder Pq Fildor / Reuters People clean up debris in front of a flooded house as a family member looks on, in Petit Goave, Haiti on 31 October 2025.Egeder Pq Fildor / Reuters

Global warming means that hurricanes like Melissa – which brought mass flooding to Haiti as well as devastation elsewhere in the Caribbean – can bring stronger winds and heavier rainfall

The continued warmth brings the world closer to breaching the international target to try to limit the rise in global temperatures to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.

That was agreed by nearly 200 countries in 2015, with the aim of avoiding some of the much more severe consequences of climate change that 2C of warming would bring.

“Looking at the most recent data, it looks like we’ll exceed that 1.5 degree level of long-term warming by the end of this decade,” said Burgess.

Three globes, showing temperatures around the world in the last three years. Reds show areas which are warmer than average; blues show areas which are cooler than average. In all three years, almost all the world is red.

While long-term warming is the result of human activities, individual years can be slightly warmer or cooler because of natural variability.

One such variable is the switch between the weather patterns El Niño and La Niña.

They primarily affect weather in the Pacific but have a knock-on effect on temperatures worldwide. El Niño years tend to be warmer as a global average, while La Niña years are typically cooler.

El Niño boosted temperatures in the world’s warmest year, 2024, as well as to a lesser extent 2023.

The return of La Niña conditions is thought to have suppressed warmth in 2025. But the fact that temperatures have remained so high in a La Niña year “is a little worrying”, according to Dr Zeke Hausfather, a climate scientist at Berkeley Earth in the US.

The last three years have seen global temperature records broken by significant margins. As the chart below shows, records for each month of the year have been set since 2023, according to Copernicus data.

Chart showing each month for each year since 1979 as distinct blocks. Months run left to right; years run from top to bottom. Each month is shaded according to its temperature compared with the long-term average between 1991 and 2020. The top of the chart is mainly blue, showing cooler years; the bottom of the chart is mainly red, showing warmer years. Highlighted blocks show the warmest for each month. For every month of the year, this has occurred within the last three years.

The size of the jump in temperatures in 2023 surprised many scientists – sparking speculation about what might be behind the surge, in addition to carbon emissions and El Niño.

Theories include changes to clouds and tiny particles called aerosols, which appear to be reflecting less of the Sun’s energy back into space.

The persistence of extreme warmth into 2025 “suggests that there might be some mysteries that we haven’t fully solved”, said Hausfather.

“We are seeing rapid warming at the upper end of our longer-term expectations,” agreed Sutton.

But whether the last three years have significiant implications for the longer term “is not yet clear”, he added, with more data needed before making firm conclusions.

While scientists expect more records to be broken in the years ahead, they emphasise that the future impacts of climate change are not set in stone.

“We can strongly affect what happens,” said Sutton, “both by mitigating climate change – that’s by cutting greenhouse gas emissions to stabilise warming – and of course also by adapting, by making society more resilient to ongoing changes.”

Additional reporting by Jess Carr

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