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With only a few days remaining, it is expected that 2023 will be the warmest year on record for Ireland, beating the previous warmest year of 2022.
For the first time, Ireland’s annual average temperature is greater than 11°C (record length 124 years).
2022 was the previous warmest year on record at nearly 10.9°C, narrowly beating 2007 by just 0.1°C.
The highest temperature of the year with 29.1°C on Friday 8th September 2023 at Lullymore Nature Centre, Co Kildare.
Keith Lambkin, Head of Climate Services at Met Éireann said:
“Ireland has seen a remarkable year with rainfall and warming at unprecedented levels at times. These record-breaking extremes have knock-on consequences to much of society. Past weather events are no longer a reliable indicator of future weather events, but knowing this allows us to better plan and adapt to our changing climate.”
Summary:
During the year we saw the following:
Eleven named storms during the year, and three named storms in December – Elin, Fergus and Gerrit.
Did you know?
It has been over a century since the coldest March (1919), April (1922), May (1923), July (1922), August (1912), September (1918) and November (1919).
Since 2000, on average, one or two months of the year have recorded their top five warmest temperatures. For example in 2022 we had two months within their top 5 warmest. However in 2023, four months reached a “top five warmest on record”: February (5th warmest), May (2nd warmest), June (warmest ever) and September (3rd warmest).
For the first time in a single year since 1941, two months observed their wettest on record, March and July.
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