Temperatures near record levels

This year is likely to be the fifth warmest on record and the first decade of this century the hottest since records began, the…

This year is likely to be the fifth warmest on record and the first decade of this century the hottest since records began, the World Meteorological Organisation said today.

Speaking on the sidelines of a UN climate conference in Copenhagen, WMO head Michel Jarraud pointed to extreme hotspots this year - Australia had its third warmest year since record dating began in 1850, "with three exceptional heatwaves".

"I could go on. There was the worst drought in five decades which affected millions of people in China, a poor monsoon season in India causing severe droughts, massive food shortages associated with a big drought in Kenya," he told reporters.

Mr Jarraud also highlighted extreme floods, including one which broke a 90-year record in Burkina Faso. 2009 marked the third lowest summer Arctic sea ice on record, after the two previous years, he added.

Vicky Pope, head of climate change advice at Britain's Met Office Hadley Centre, which supplied some of the WMO data, agreed that 2009 is likely to be the fifth warmest year.

"Essentially what's happened is we've gone into an El Nino," she added, referring to a natural weather pattern which drives abnormal warming in the eastern Pacific Ocean and can unleash wider havoc in global weather.

The hottest year record, 1998, coincided with a powerful El Nino, and a new El Nino developed this year.

Ms Pope said this decade was 0.4 degrees Celsius above the 1960s average, while the 1990s was 0.23 degrees higher.

"It's just a matter of years before we break the record," Mr Jarraud said. "It's getting warmer and warmer. The warming trend is increasing."

Mr Jarraud rejected the "Climategate" row over leaked emails from Britain's University of East Anglia Climatic Research Unit (CRU), which showed some scientists' efforts to boost the credibility of climate change at the expense of sceptics.

The WMO used British - including CRU - and two US data sources for its temperature analysis. "The three separately show almost identical results," said Jarraud.

The fact that the record for the hottest year has not been broken since 1998 has helped fuel arguments from a small minority of scientists that climate change may not be as severe as feared.