Japan records warmest September in 125 years.The effects of climate change are being observed in various ways around the world. Fires in different countries, strong storms, drought and heat – these effects are now affecting the people of the world. Thousands of people died recently in Libya due to tsunami-like storms and floods. Europe recently storms Japan records warmest September on record. All these are the result of climate change.

Now it is known that the Asian country Japan records warmest September in 125 years.

Japan had its Japan records warmest September since records began in 1898, the East Asian country’s weather agency said.
Besides, the year 2023 is also likely to be recorded as the hottest year in human history.

According to media reports, the Japan Meteorological Agency said on Monday that the average temperature for the month of September was 2.66 degrees Celsius (36.78 degrees Fahrenheit) above normal. “This was the highest temperature since Japan records warmest began in 1898,” the agency said in a statement.

September was the hottest month on record in many countries around the world, including Austria, France, Germany, Poland and Switzerland. It is also believed that 2023 will be the hottest year in the history of human civilization due to climate change.

The western European country will see an average September temperature of 21.5 degrees Celsius, according to Meteo-France, the French meteorological authority. Which is 3.5 degrees Celsius to 3.6 degrees Celsius higher than the period 1991-2020.

The UK also recorded its warmest September since records began in 1884.

Incidentally, climate change is one of the threats facing the world now. It has already begun to have an impact on the world. Although various steps have been taken around the world to deal with it, not much has been achieved yet.

It should be noted that industrial production around the world started shortly before 1850. According to the United Nations climate report, the average global temperature has risen by 1.2 degrees Celsius in the last 173 years since then.

This rise in average temperature has already upset the balance of the world’s climate. At the same time many animal and plant species are at risk of extinction.

However, concerned scientists are blaming the increase in temperature over the years due to excessive use of fossil fuels, destruction of forests and release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the air at a rate much higher than normal.

Sources: The Japan Times , South China Morning Post , NDTV

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