Bangladehs
The weekly round-up on the climate crisis and data on carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere. According to preliminary data from the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the first week of July was the world's hottest ever recorded since global temperatures have been recorded with "potentially devastating impacts on ecosystems and the environment".At least three series of data indicate this, explains the WMO:those managed by the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA), those collected by the University of Maine and those by the European Union climate monitoring service, Copernicus.With a global average temperature of 17.24°C on July 7th has been overcome the previous record, reached on 16 August 2016, was 0.3°C.Then, as today, the El Niño climate phenomenon influenced global temperatures. The month of June had already been the hottest month on record and this week Italy could touch levels never reached in Europe, writes the Guardian. &ldqu...