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El Niño may be gone, but Earth’s heat is still here

The first six months of 2016 have been the warmest on record. NASA/NOAA/GSFC/Suomi NPP/VIIRS/Norman Kuring

WASHINGTON – Earth’s persistent record 2016 heat is now dancing near levels that a world agreement is trying to avoid, federal scientists said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said Tuesday that globally, June was the 14th straight record hot month, with Earth averaging 16.4 C. That is 0.9 C warmer than average and a shade above the record set in 2015. The last month Earth wasn’t record hot was April 2015.

READ MORE: The last 12-month period has been the hottest on record nine times in a row

NOAA also warned about excessive heat for much of the United States this week, especially at the end of the week, when parts of the East could be flirting with triple digit temperatures.

WATCH: NASA sees global temperatures rise and sea ice shrink

Scientists said records keep falling because of a combination of man-made global warming and the natural El Niño, a periodic warming of the Pacific that changes weather worldwide and heats the globe. But El Niño ended a couple months ago and the record heat — and record melting of Arctic sea ice — has stuck around.

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What’s really got federal scientists’ attention is the record warm first half of 2016, which comes after two record hot years.

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NOAA said the first half of 2016 was 0.2 C warmer than last year’s record.

NASA chief climate scientist Gavin Schmidt said the first six months of the year were not just the warmest on record, by far, but 21.3 C than the last two decades of the 19th century. But more importantly, he said 2016 so far is about 1.5 C than pre-industrial times.

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That 1.5 C mark is key. A December 2015 international pact to control global warming set a goal of avoiding 1.5 degrees Celsius warming above pre-industrial levels. And the agreement says if Earth can’t limit global warming to 1.5 degrees, at least it should limit it to 2 C above pre-industrial levels.

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READ MORE: Climate change—Why world leaders want to stop Earth from warming 2 C

Because El Niño is a factor — Schmidt figured about 40 per cent of the reason 2016 is hotter than 2015 is due to El Niño — 2017 will likely be a bit cooler than 2016. When scientists look at long-term warming since pre-industrial times, they don’t look at one year, but it’s still a pretty noticeable threshold, Schmidt said.

Schmidt and NOAA climate scientist Jake Crouch said 2016 will likely be the hottest year on record for a third consecutive year. Schmidt said his statistical calculations put the chance of 2016 being record hot at 99 per cent.

Temperature records go back to 1880.

NASA scientists said the warming has caused an extreme melting of Arctic sea ice for the beginning of 2016. Usually Arctic sea ice peaks in the winter and reaches its lowest point in September.

But so far five of the first six months of 2016 set record low averages, said NASA sea ice scientist Walt Meier. Sea ice measurements go back to 1979.

Watch below: NASA releases video from high-resolution surveying of Arctic sea ice. Researchers are studying the effects of global warming on sea ice levels. Margeaux Morin has more.

Click to play video: 'NASA researchers study effects of global warming on sea ice levels'
NASA researchers study effects of global warming on sea ice levels

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