Preliminary temperature figures for 2006, released today by the Met Office and the University of East Anglia (UEA's Climatic Research Unit), show the mean surface air temperature has continued to demonstrate a warming climate, both around the globe and especially here in the UK.
2006 is very likely to be the warmest year in terms of CET. The joint warmest years currently are 1990 and 1999, which recorded a mean temperature of 10.63 °C and with just over two weeks to the end of the year, the current mean temperature anomaly to 12 December is equivalent to an annual temperature of 10.84 °C.
2006 is very likely to be the warmest year in terms of CET. The joint warmest years currently are 1990 and 1999, which recorded a mean temperature of 10.63 °C and with just over two weeks to the end of the year, the current mean temperature anomaly to 12 December is equivalent to an annual temperature of 10.84 °C.
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This is really good news and must have saved a fair few thousand lives of the frail and elderly. Not to mention a good chunk of household income that would otherwise have gone on heating.
The cause, should you be interested, was the predominance of southerly and south-westerly winds that originated in Africa.
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