Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Hottest Average Global Temperature Ever Recorded Didn't Apply To Canada In 2015

The Canadian Press, 21 Jan, 2016 11:02 AM
    OTTAWA — Call it cold comfort, but Atlantic Canada was one of the only regions on the planet that had cooler-than-average temperatures last year, according to Environment Canada.
     
    On a day when NASA officially announced the hottest average global temperature — by a statistically significant margin — ever recorded in 136 years of modern record-keeping, Canada as a whole experienced merely its 11th warmest year in 2015.
     
    The data helps illustrate a wild weather year that was influenced by both a powerful El Nino in the Pacific Ocean and what NASA describes as global climate change "largely driven by increased carbon dioxide and other human-made emissions into the atmosphere."
     
    According to both NASA and the U.S. National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration, which measures the Earth's surface temperature in a slightly different way, 2015 averaged 14.79 degrees C, the hottest since 1880 when records began. And it beat the previous 2014 record by roughly one quarter of a degree, the second largest year-over-year margin.
     
    Canada, as a northern nation, generally experiences greater-than-global-average impacts from climate change, but 2015 was no normal year.
     
    In fact, David Phillips, the senior climatologist at Environment and Climate Change Canada, says only a very hot autumn likely kept all of eastern Canada from experiencing an abnormally cool year.
     
     
    Overall, Canada's average temperature from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 was up 1.3 degrees Celsius from the historic average  measured over the last 68 years
     
    However that national average hides some massive regional temperature swings, including record-breaking averages across British Columbia and Yukon, the third warmest year on record for the southern Prairies and the fifth warmest for the Mackenzie delta in the Northwest Territories.
     
    Contrast that with Atlantic Canada, which Phillips says was one of the very few regions on the planet that experienced a colder-than-average 2015.
     
    "There were only two areas in the world that were actually cooler than normal," in NOAA data sets late last fall, said the climatologist.
     
    One was a tiny area in southern Argentina. The other was eastern Canada.
     
    The Great Lakes region in central Canada was just 0.3 degrees C above average, recording its 28th warmest year of the last 68.
     
    Chalk that up to a bitterly cold winter in the eastern half of the country.
     
     
    "People were thinking it was a global warming hoax when the world announced the warmest winter on record — because we were going through one of the coldest in Ontario, Quebec and Atlantic Canada," said Phillips.
     
    That was followed by the warmest fall on record in much of central Canada, as it finally caught up with the western half of the country.
     
    Phillips said Canada overall has been warmer than normal for 19 consecutive years, while globally 14 of the 15 warmest years ever recorded have occurred since 2000.
     
    He also notes a "head-shaking" statistic: the last time the planet recorded a record average low temperature was 1916.
     
    So while 2015 was "no screaming hell" in Canada, says Phillips, "we know that the world is warmer now."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mounties, Businessman Save Christmas For B.C. Children Seized By Ministry Worker

    RCMP in the Interior city of Trail say the constables visited a local home on Thursday to check on the well-being of five- and nine-year-old girls.

    Mounties, Businessman Save Christmas For B.C. Children Seized By Ministry Worker

    Author Joseph Boyden Among Canadians Appointed To The Order Of Canada

    Author Joseph Boyden Among Canadians Appointed To The Order Of Canada
    Boyden, whose novels include Three Day Road and The Orenda, joined 68 other people recognized Wednesday by the Governor General with one of the country's highest civilian honours.

    Author Joseph Boyden Among Canadians Appointed To The Order Of Canada

    B.C.'s Lauds Jump In Aboriginal Graduation Rate, Still Trails National Average

    B.C.'s Lauds Jump In Aboriginal Graduation Rate, Still Trails National Average
    The number of aboriginal students finishing secondary school in the province has increased steadily from about 54 to 63 per cent over the past six years, as indicated by data from B.C.'s Education Ministry.

    B.C.'s Lauds Jump In Aboriginal Graduation Rate, Still Trails National Average

    Cause Of Death Unknown After Orca Calf Found Dead On Vancouver Island Coast

    Cause Of Death Unknown After Orca Calf Found Dead On Vancouver Island Coast
    Paul Cottrell of Fisheries and Oceans Canada says a surfer found the whale on Dec. 23 and a necropsy was conducted on Christmas Day.

    Cause Of Death Unknown After Orca Calf Found Dead On Vancouver Island Coast

    B.C. Man Faces 28 Charges, Accused Of Ramming Police Cruiser, Fleeing By Kayak

    B.C. Man Faces 28 Charges, Accused Of Ramming Police Cruiser, Fleeing By Kayak
    Mounties say 35-year-old Justin Daniels put a pick-up truck he was driving in reverse and rammed a police cruiser that had pulled him over before driving away early Monday morning.

    B.C. Man Faces 28 Charges, Accused Of Ramming Police Cruiser, Fleeing By Kayak

    Current Data Suggests Feds Will Miss Year-end Syrian Refugee Resettlement Target

    Current Data Suggests Feds Will Miss Year-end Syrian Refugee Resettlement Target
    OTTAWA — The federal government appears likely to miss its latest target to resettle 10,000 Syrians by the end of this year.

    Current Data Suggests Feds Will Miss Year-end Syrian Refugee Resettlement Target