James Hansen predicts 2026 as hottest year on record

James Hansen, a prominent climate scientist at Columbia University, has predicted that 2026 will become the hottest year on record, surpassing 2024 due to accelerating global warming and an impending super El Niño. He argues that current sea surface temperatures support this forecast despite ongoing La Niña cooling. Other experts urge caution amid forecast uncertainties.

James Hansen, who testified to the US Congress in 1988 about human-caused global warming, stated in a recent blog post with colleagues that 2026 will break the temperature record set by 2024. That year saw global temperatures exceed 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels for the first time. “That margin is wide enough that we are willing to make the prediction that 2026 will be the warmest year,” they wrote, noting sea surface temperatures are now 0.17°C warmer than in 2023, compared to 0.11°C in 2024. “Of course, 2027 will be still hotter,” they added. The second half of 2026 is expected to see the start of a powerful El Niño phase, potentially the strongest on record, as warm water expands across the equatorial Pacific Ocean, heating the planet further. Current La Niña conditions have kept the first three months of 2026 about 0.1°C cooler than the same period in 2024 on average. Zeke Hausfather at Berkeley Earth projected 2026 at 1.47°C above pre-industrial levels, second-warmest on record, while a 30 April blog post by Hausfather gave it a 26 percent chance of being hottest and 56 percent for second. Other scientists express reservations. Adam Scaife at the UK Met Office noted uncertainty, with their December forecast ranging from 1.34°C to 1.58°C above pre-industrial averages, short of 2024's 1.55°C. “Nobody can be 100 per cent confident,” Scaife said. John Kennedy at the World Meteorological Organization described Hansen’s forecast as one method among many. Scaife acknowledged Hansen's concern that warming rates exceed models, possibly indicating higher climate sensitivity to CO2. An El Niño on top of record warming is set to heighten risks of heatwaves, droughts, and wildfires in regions like Australia, South-East Asia, central and southern Africa, India, and the Amazon.

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Drought-stricken Andes landscape with forest fires and NOAA El Niño forecast map overlay, illustrating 90% probability warning.
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NOAA raises El Niño probability to 90% for September 2026

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The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) updated its forecasts, estimating a 90% probability of El Niño starting in September 2026 and lasting through the year's final quarter. It raised the May-July projection from 25% in March to 61%. Experts warn of impacts in regions like the Caribbean, Andes, and Orinoquía, including forest fire risks from water deficits and thermal stress.

A massive heat wave in the Western US and a potential El Niño event signal concerns for unpredictable extreme weather ahead. Despite 2025 ranking as the third-hottest year on record, it saw fewer climate disasters than expected.

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Building on recent studies like Stefan Rahmstorf et al.'s analysis showing a doubling of Earth's warming rate to ~0.36°C per decade since 2014, scientists disagree on whether reductions in aerosol pollution or natural fluctuations are driving the speedup. Nearly all agree warming has accelerated, but views differ on causes, rate, and future trajectory—with implications for climate sensitivity and adaptation.

A study in PLOS Climate reports that U.S. warming trends vary sharply by state and by whether researchers look at temperature averages or extremes. Using data from 1950 to 2021 for the 48 contiguous states, the authors found that 27 states showed statistically significant increases in average temperature, while 41 showed warming in at least one part of their temperature range—such as hotter highs in parts of the West and warmer cold-season lows in parts of the North.

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The state weather bureau Pagasa has raised its alert and warning system to El Niño alert level as the weather phenomenon is expected to prevail by the next quarter. Climate Monitoring and Prediction Section chief Ana Liza Solis said El Niño has a 79 percent chance of emerging in the June-July-August season and may persist until 2027.

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