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China saw its hottest year on record in 2023, state media reported this week, as the world’s biggest polluter confronted a series of relentless heat waves and other extreme weather events driven by the human-caused climate crisis, reports CNA.
Daily and monthly temperature records
were repeatedly shattered as the year wore on while the country grappled with
scorching heat waves, which authorities said had arrived earlier
and been more widespread and extreme than in previous years.
China’s exceptional warmth echoed
global trends – with scientists confirming that 2023 will officially be the
hottest year on record, the result of the combined effects of El Niño and climate change.
The average temperature in China last
year stood at 10.7 degrees Celsius – the highest since records began in 1961,
according to the National Climate Center, state-run news agency Xinhua
reported.
It breaks the previous record of
10.5°C set in 2021.
Across the country, 127 weather
stations recorded their highest ever daily temperatures, state-run newspaper
China Daily reported.
The year’s most extreme weather shows what a warming
planet is capable of, and what’s to come
The highest of those was 52.2°C on
July 16 in Turpan’s Sanpu town, in the far western Xinjiang region.
The prolonged and persistent heat
affected hundreds of millions of people and put huge strain on the country’s
power grid. In July, China Energy Investment Corporation, one of the world’s
largest generators of coal-fired power, said the volume of electricity it produced had hit a
daily record.
There were also reports of farm animals, including pigs, rabbits
and fish, dying from the searing temperatures and wheat fields in central China
being flooded by heavy rainfall, raising concerns about food security in the
world’s second largest economy.
A similar story played out across the
world in 2023, with a series of deadly heat waves and remarkable record
temperatures hitting several continents, while unprecedented ocean heat blanketed much of
the globe.
Analysis from the European Union’s Copernicus Climate
Change Service found 2023’s global temperature will be more than 1.4 degrees
Celsius warmer than pre-industrial levels — close to the 1.5-degree threshold
in the Paris climate agreement, and beyond which scientists say humans and
ecosystems will struggle to adapt.
Extreme highs and lows
At the other end of the scale, China
also recorded its lowest ever temperature last year on January 22, when Jintao
town in Mohe, northeastern Heilongjiang province dropped to -53° C.
And in December, the capital Bejing
recorded its longest cold wave since records began in
1951, as sub-zero temperatures stretched heating capacity of some cities
in northern China to its limit.
China’s extreme weather also saw some
of the heaviest rainfall in decades, with flooding bringing devastation to
millions of people’s lives and causing billions of dollars in damage.
A total of 55 national weather
stations recorded their highest daily rainfall in 2023, according to the
National Climate Center.
Typhoon Doksuri slammed into
southeastern Fujian province on July 28, bringing rains that soaked
Hebei, a province of 75 million, and the neighboring cities of Beijing and
Tianjin.
Flooding in those regions killed about 30
people, displaced more than 1 million and washed away houses, bridges and
highways, according to Chinese authorities.
The storm also brought the heaviest rainfall Beijing has experienced in
140 years, marking a significant test of the region’s capacity to handle
extreme weather that experts warn will become more frequent with climate
change.
After a terrible year of climate news, here are 5 reasons
to feel positive
Scientists are clear that the climate crisis
is making extreme weather events – such as heat waves, storms and heavy
rainfall – more frequent and intense, and they will continue to become more
frequent and severe as the planet heats up while humans burn more fossil fuels.
China is the world’s biggest polluter,
making up nearly 30% of global emissions and
accounting for over half of global demand for coal, according to the
International Energy Agency.
The World Bank has said that without China successfully
reducing its planet-heating emissions and transitioning to clean energy, the
world will have little chance of achieving its climate goals.
China has been accelerating production
of sustainable energy and the country is on track to double its wind and solar
energy capacity and hit its 2030 clean energy targets as soon as 2025, a June report found.
In November, China pledged a major ramp-up of renewable
energy, alongside the United States, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
The country also played a key role in
climate negotiations at the COP28 summit in Dubai in December, which made an
unprecedented call to transition away from fossil fuels.
However, China did not sign an
official agreement to triple renewable energy capacity
and double energy efficiency, both by 2030, according to Carbon Brief.
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