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China records hottest month in current history

China had its hottest month in observed modern-day history in July, Chinese state media reported, matching record heat seen around the world last month.

Temperatures averaged 23.21 degrees Celsius (73.78 degrees Fahrenheit) last month, eclipsing the 23.17 C in July 2017, China's national tv broadcaster reported on Thursday - the highest monthly average because the nation started assembling extensive information in 1961.

The world registered its hottest day on record on July 22, with the worldwide average surface air temperature level reaching 17.15 C.

What makes this year's record heat unusual is that - unlike in 2023 and 2016 - the El Nino environment pattern, which amplifies worldwide temperature levels owing to warmer-than-usual waters in the Eastern Pacific, ended in April but temperatures have not abated.

That indicates the greater-than-ever impact of environment change in improving worldwide temperature levels, some scientists state.

In July, all of China's provinces had typical temperatures higher than the same month in previous years. Temperatures in the provinces of Guizhou and Yunnan were the greatest, followed by Hunan, Jiangxi and Zhejiang, according to China Central Television (CCTV).

On Aug. 1, temperature levels remained raised in the Yangtze River delta, with Shanghai, Nanjing, Hangzhou and other provincial capitals anticipate to bake under high temperatures for the next 7 days.

Hangzhou might sizzle in record temperature levels exceeding 40C, according to CCTV.

Worldwide warming has made weather events in China more intense and unforeseeable. The world's second-largest economy has seen a few of the most intense rains in recent history, activating floods and landslides.

China has seen 25 considerable floods in significant rivers in this year's flood season, more than any other year since 1998 when record-keeping started, the Ministry of Water Resources said on Thursday.

(source: Reuters)