Science

October heat record smashed by 'incredible amount'

This October blew away previous records to become the hottest ever recorded, giving a boost to predictions that this year will be 'an all-time record-breaker' when it comes to the global temperature.

'This year is going to be an all-time record-breaker,' researcher predicts

Beachgoers relax on Bondi beach during a hot spring day in Sydney, Australia, in October. Record heat was found in Australia, southern Asia, parts of western North America, much of central and southern Africa, most of Central America and northern South America during October, according to NOAA. (David Gray/Reuters)

Even in a record-breaking hot year for Earth, October stood out as absurdly warm.

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said that last month globally was 14.98 C. That's the hottest October on record by a fifth of a degree over the old mark, "an incredible amount" for weather records, said NOAA climate scientist Jessica Blunden.

October's temperature was the most above-normal month in history. It was 0.98 degrees Celsius above the 20th-century average.

This is just a new normal.- Jessica Blunden, NOAA

"A complete blowout," said Jeffrey Sachs, director of Columbia University's Earth Institute. "This year is going to be an all-time record-breaker."

This was the eighth month this year when a heat record was set, with only January and April not setting records. That's a record number of broken records in any year. Records go back to 1880.

El Nino shares blame

Blunden and other scientists blame a potent and strengthening El Nino on top of accelerating man-made global warming.

"This is just a new normal," Blunden said. "I don't know what really else to call it."

Nearly every team that measures temperatures found that October 2015 was a record, including NASA, the Japanese Meteorological Agency, University of California at Berkeley and University of Alabama at Huntsville, which measures the upper air using satellites, Blunden said.

Record heat was found in Australia, southern Asia, parts of western North America, much of central and southern Africa, most of Central America and northern South America, according to NOAA.

It's also the hottest January through October for Earth on record, along with the hottest consecutive 12 months on record.

Given that the El Nino continues to strengthen and how much warmer 2015 is than previous years, Blunden said "it is virtually just impossible that we will not break the record" for the hottest year. That record was set in 2014. Since the year 2000, global monthly heat records have been broken 32 times, yet the last time a monthly cold record was set was in 1916.