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Multiple organizations, including NOAA and Berkeley Earth, analyzed the temperature data and concluded that 2025 was the third warmest year on record, indicating a continuing trend of global warming.
Some 770 million people experienced record-warm annual conditions where they live in 2025 according to Berkeley Earth.
Berkeley Earth recorded that no location logged a record-cold annual average in 2025.
Copernicus and Berkeley Earth indicated that the emergence of an El Niño could make 2026 another record-breaking year.
Berkeley Earth chief scientist Robert Rohde attributes the magnitude of the recent warming spike to additional factors beyond greenhouse gases and natural variability.
Berkeley Earth anticipates that 2026 will likely be the fourth-warmest year since 1850.
Berkeley Earth assessed that 2026 was likely to be similar to 2025, with the most likely outcome being approximately the fourth-warmest year since 1850.
Berkeley Earth chief scientist Robert Rohde stated that recent warming appears to be influenced by factors beyond greenhouse gases and natural variability.
Berkeley Earth identified 2024 as the warmest year on record and 2023 as the second warmest.
Berkeley Earth reported that Central Asia, the Sahel region, and northern Europe experienced their hottest year on record in 2025.