Euronews.green writes that the information comes after a few weeks earlier we learned that 2023's June was the hottest month ever since recordings started. Meteorologists around the world said that Antarctica and South America experienced temperatures above the normal averages for these regions during this time of the year, while states in the Northern Hemisphere battled scorching heatwaves.

Samantha Burgess, deputy director of C3S, said that "2023 is currently the third warmest year to date at 0.43ºC above the recent average, with the average global temperature in July at 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels."

C3S and World Meteorological Organization experts announced that this year's July was the hottest month ever before the full 31 days, given that July 6th was the hottest day ever on Earth. According to experts, during that day, the average temperature on our planet reached 17.08 degrees Celsius, breaking a record set back in the summer of 2016.

"We just witnessed global air temperatures and global ocean surface temperatures set new all-time records in July", Burgess added.

Due to the El Niño weather phenomenon and humanity's insufficient efforts to limit global warming, experts warn that this year's recordings won't be isolated and, in the future, we may assist to multiple broken records temperature-wise.