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    <title>Global and European temperature</title>
    <link>https://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/indicators/global-and-european-temperature/global-and-european-temperature-assessment-4</link>
    <description> Global 
   The global (land and ocean) average temperature increase between 1850 and 2010 was 0.81  0 C using combined UK Met Office Hadley centre and University of East Anglia - Climate Research Unit HadCRUT3 dataset compared to the 1850 - 1899 period average temperature and 0.89  0 C using Goddard Institute for Space Studies - GISS dataset compared to the 1880 - 1899 period average temperature.  All used temperature records show the 2000s decade (2001 - 2010) was the warmest decade.    For the HadCRUT3 and GISS datasets the rate of the global average has increased from around 0.06  0 C per decade over last 100 years, to 0.18 - 0.22  0 C in last decade.    
  The best estimates for projected global warming in this century are a further rise in the global average temperature from 1.8 to 4.0  0 C for different scenarios that assume no further/additional action to limit emissions. The EU global temperature target is projected to be exceeded between 2040 and 2060, taking into account all six IPCC scenarios.   
 Europe
   Europe has warmed more than the global average. The average temperature for the European land area for the last decade (2001 - 2010) was 1.2 °C above the 1850 - 1899 average, and for the combined land and ocean area 1.0 °C above. Considering the land area, 8 out of the last 13 years were among the warmest years since 1850.   High-temperature extremes like hot days, tropical nights, and heat waves have become more frequent, while low - temperature extremes (e.g. cold spells, frost days) have become less frequent in Europe. The average length of summer heat waves over Western Europe doubled over the period 1850 to 2010 and the frequency of hot days almost tripled.   The annual average temperature in Europe is projected to rise in this century with the largest warming over eastern and northern Europe in winter, and over Southern Europe in summer.    High temperature events across Europe including temperature extremes  such as heat waves are projected to become more frequent, intense and  longer this century, whereas winter temperature variability and the  number of cold and frost extremes are projected to decrease further. According to the projections, the most affected European regions are going to be the Iberian and the  Apennine Peninsula and south - eastern Europe.  
   
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