
This year will conclude as the second hottest on record, surpassed only by 2024. It continues a recent trend of exceptional, unexplained warming. The last three years have been, by a wide margin, the hottest ever recorded.
Each of the last three years has measured more than 1.5 degrees C warmer than preindustrial times, putting the world at least temporarily in breach of an international goal to limit warming below that level, according to the Copernicus Climate Change Service.
The recent jump in warming, which exceeded the predictions of climate models, has puzzled scientists. Experts have explored a range of potential factors, from a recent volcanic eruption in the South Pacific to a drop in sunlight-blocking pollution.
Drawing on recent research into these questions, climate scientist Zeke Hausfather looked at four potential drivers of the warming surge for a recent analysis, published in Carbon Brief.
First was the 2022 eruption of Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha‘apai, an underwater volcano in the South Pacific, which sent a massive plume of heat-trapping water vapor into the upper atmosphere. And second was the recent uptick in solar output. Though the timing aligns well with the recent spike in warming, Hausfather finds these factors can explain less than half of the jump in temperature.
A third potential factor was the formation in late 2023 of a powerful El Niño, when warm waters pooled in the eastern Pacific, driving up temperatures worldwide. But while El Niño may explain the exceptional warmth in 2024, Hausfather shows, it cannot account for the jump in temperatures in early 2023.
Lastly was the recent dramatic drop in emissions of sulfur dioxide. The pollutant, which issues from coal power plants, blocks sunlight, thus cooling the planet. Its decline has fueled warming. In the past 18 years, sulfur dioxide emissions have declined by 40 percent as countries, namely China, cleaned up pollution from burning coal. Then in 2020, a new international rule cut sulfur dioxide from cargo ships, leading to a steep drop in pollution from shipping.
Scientists have focused on shipping as an explanation for the sudden warming surge. While research has generally found that cuts to shipping pollution have only had a modest impact on temperatures, one study, from James Hansen, formerly the chief climate scientist at NASA, found that the drop in shipping pollution would explain nearly all of the recent, exceptional warming.
Hausfather says that, together, all four factors may explain the recent surge. But even if they can, he says, questions remain: Is the surge temporary, or is it a sign that warming is accelerating?
ALSO ON YALE E360
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Instructions to Pick the Right Gold Speculation Procedure: Exploring the Market - 2
Instructions to Pick the Right Tires for Your Slam 1500. - 3
Figurine of a woman and a goose offers peek at prehistoric beliefs - 4
Instructions to Grasp the Innovation Behind 5G Pinnacles\ - 5
Iran-backed militias reassert power in Iraq, proving the Islamic axis is still standing
NASA set to launch Artemis 2 moon mission today, the 1st crewed lunar flight since 1972
Lower-cost space missions like NASA's ESCAPADE are starting to deliver exciting science – but at a price in risk and trade‑offs
There’s ‘super flu,’ COVID, RSV. Is it going around in SoCal?
He walked on the moon in 1972. This is his advice for the Artemis II astronauts.
New funding transforms lives by expanding electricity access across Africa
China's 'Venice Of The East' Is A Historic Canal City Near Shanghai With Arched Bridges And Lantern-Lit Waterways
Nature carves colossal snowman in Siberia | Space photo of the day for Jan. 2, 2026
The 15 Most Rousing TED Chats on Self-awareness
This Canadian crater looks like marbled meat | Space photo of the day for Jan. 6, 2026













