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Home Featured

Uni of Reading: Latest deep red stripe marks planet’s third-hottest year on Climate Stripes

Jake Clothier by Jake Clothier
Wednesday, January 14, 2026 7:26 am
in Featured, Reading
A A
Annual updates to a stark graphic laying out the rising temperatures across the planet have been added to reflect Earth's third-warmest year on record. Picture: Professor Ed Hawkins, University of Reading

Annual updates to a stark graphic laying out the rising temperatures across the planet have been added to reflect Earth's third-warmest year on record. Picture: Professor Ed Hawkins, University of Reading

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ANNUAL updates to a stark graphic laying out the rising temperatures across the planet have been added to reflect Earth’s third-warmest year on record.

The Climate Stripes, known across the world for their depiction of how Earth has warmed over the past 176 years, have been updated following the latest release today (Wednesday, January 14.)

The climate stripes show the change in average annual global temperatures since 1850, with red stripes indicating hotter years and blue stripes indicating cooler years, against the average of the period 1961-2010.

They use annual global temperature data from Copernicus Climate Change Service, ECMWF, NASA, NOAA, the UK Met Office, Berkeley Earth, and the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO).

The new data means the global climate stripes now have an extra dark red stripe to represent the extreme temperature of 2025.

New climate stripes graphics have also been created to show the UK’s warmest year on record, according to Met Office data back to 1884, and the second-warmest year on record in Reading, according to data from the Reading University Atmospheric Observatory back to 1908.

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Since their creation in 2018, The stripes have helped raise awareness of the rapid warming of the planet.

They have been projected onto the White Cliffs of Dover and various famous landmarks, used on sports jerseys and at fashion shows, and shared widely across social media.

Stripes images for individual cities, countries and continents can also be generated.

Professor Hawkins said: “2025 was slightly cooler than 2023 and 2024, but this drop should not be seen as a sign that things are getting better.

“The last 11 years have been the warmest 11 years on record, and 2026 is almost certain to continue this sequence due to the relentless accumulation of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere, primarily due to burning fossil fuels.

“Warmer temperatures have real impacts. Hotter heatwaves cause more health issues, heavier downpours cause greater flooding risks and rising sea levels causing more coastal flooding hazards.

“We must urgently step up our efforts to cut emissions and prepare for the warming that is now inevitable.”

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