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July 3, 2024

Average months now feel cold thanks to climate change

June temperatures were overall slightly – but not massively – below average. Credit: Met Office
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June temperatures were overall slightly – but not massively – below average. Credit: Met Office

People in the UK love discussing the weather. For the first two weeks of June 2024, the cold, dull conditions were all they could talk about. Major news outlets like the BBC, , Daily Mail and all carried stories on this theme.

The colder start to June was driven by winds from the north, bringing cool polar air down towards the UK. However, in the second half of the month, a high-pressure system took over and temperatures picked up, reaching 30.3°C on Wednesday 26.

In reality, June 2024 temperatures were pretty typical, about the long-term average. The month was drier than usual and sunshine hours were for the UK as a whole, though significantly below average in parts of Scotland and Northern Ireland.

Even the first ten days of June in England were only 2.3°C colder than average conditions from 1991 to 2020, according to the record. The years 2012, 2015 and 2019 all saw similar conditions. So why did 2024 attract so much attention?

A changing climate

Our climate is changing, but how we experience this is through our weather, with more frequent and intense heat waves, and fewer cold spells. In contrast to 2024, June 2023 was the hottest on record, marked by an unprecedented around the UK and Ireland.

More broadly, Europe has been a hotspot for warming since the 1970s, with temperatures increasing at roughly double the and extreme summer temperatures .

The hottest five days in the UK since 1910, have all occurred .

Such a rapid rate of warming means we have come to normalize , while relatively cold or even average conditions feel unusual and thus newsworthy.

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Why this matters

When we experience a cold period, it is harder to picture the effects of extreme heat and acting on feels less urgent. Notably, climate change has featured little in the 2024 election campaign. Perhaps that would have been different had the UK been experiencing 40°C, as it did .

However, while the UK was relatively cool in early June, the US, Mexico and Greece all suffered deadly heat waves, and more than 1,300 pilgrims died enduring unprecedented heat in .

Public normalization of hotter temperatures may also affect our perception of climate change and thus our willingness to act on it. Ecologists describe a phenomenon called , which is the idea that as the environment degrades, each new generation accepts the degraded situation they experience as normal. This also , as people forget or have no experience of the climate in the not-too-distant past.

However, the changing climate, with more frequent and intense heat waves, has severe effects even in the relatively mild UK. While heat waves are often depicted with "fun in the sun" pictures, extreme heat affects the most vulnerable in society. The UK government calculates that occurred in summer 2022 due to heat waves.

Heat also by damaging roads, disrupting the rail network and putting a strain on fire departments through wildfires.

While we continue to burn , releasing into the atmosphere, the planet will continue to warm. Consequently, recent warm summers such as 2022 may feel average or even cool by the . To avoid the normalization of extreme and potentially life-threatening weather events, scientists have a responsibility to inform the public about how our climate is changing.

Provided by The Conversation

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