- Lancet study estimates Gaza death toll 40% higher than recorded
- South Korea's presidential security chief resigns
- Italian FM tours landmark mosque in first Syria visit
- 'Apocalyptic': ghastly remains of Malibu come into focus
- Pakistan flight departs for Paris after EU ban lifted
- Nicolas Maduro: Venezuela's iron-fisted 'worker president'
- Ukraine's French-trained brigade rocked by scandal
- Venezuela's Maduro to take presidential oath despite domestic, global outcry
- Red-hot Gauff vows to keep cool in Australian Open title charge
- Zverev says he has mindset to finally win Grand Slam in Melbourne
- Anti-war Russian theatre in Latvia fights language ban
- Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai to visit native Pakistan for girls' summit
- Shotgun watch: LA fire evacuees guard against looters
- Los Angeles fire deaths at 10 as National Guard called in
- 'Control freak' Swiatek describes shock and 'chaos' over doping ban
- Vietnam jails ex-lawyer over Facebook posts
- Sinner in dark over verdict as ATP says doping case 'run by the book'
- US President-elect Trump to be sentenced for hush money conviction
- AI comes down from the cloud as chips get smarter
- Englishman Hall grabs share of Sony Open lead
- Olympic champ Zheng says 'getting closer' to top-ranked Sabalenka
- Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
- Air tankers fight Los Angeles fires from frantic skies
- Right-wing disinformation targets DEI, 'liberal' policies as LA burns
- Osaka to play Australian Open after 'devastating' injury pullout
- 'Disruptor' Medvedev ready to bring down Sinner and Alcaraz
- Atletico can seize La Liga lead as Osasuna visit
- Navalny lawyers face long sentences in 'extremism' trial
- India's Kumbh Mela, world's largest religious gathering
- India readies for mammoth Hindu festival of 400 million pilgrims
- Uruguay bucks 2024 global warming trend
- Last 2 years crossed 1.5C global warming limit: EU monitor
- Asian markets drift lower as US jobs data looms
- Sabalenka has 'target on her back' in pursuit of Australian Open 'history'
- Croatia's populist president tipped for re-election
- Veteran Monfils powers past teenager to reach 35th final
- Japan 'poop master' gives back to nature
- UN watchdog says Australia violated asylum seekers' rights
- Murray braced for Djokovic ire in coaching debut at Australian Open
- At CES, AI-powered garbage trucks reduce battery fire risk
- S. Korea presidential security chief urges 'no bloodshed' in Yoon arrest
- Combustible Kyrgios says tennis 'a bit mundane' without him
- US Supreme Court to hear TikTok ban case
- Los Angeles Rams playoff game moved to Arizona over fires: NFL
- Survivors patrol as looters prey on fire-wrecked Los Angeles
- US 'Pizzagate' conspiracy theory gunman killed by police: media
- ATP chief insists Sinner doping case 'run by the book'
- Musk promotes German far-right leader in latest European intervention
- Inter Miami's Mascherano cools Neymar talk
- Danish PM reaches out to Trump over Greenland remarks
Uruguay bucks 2024 global warming trend
The world experienced its hottest year in 2024 since records began, but in the small South American country of Uruguay, global warming was counteracted by bouts of "near-historic" cold.
Last year was the warmest globally since data recording began in 1850, Europe's climate monitor Copernicus said Friday, confirming what it had been predicting for months.
But in Uruguay, nestled between Brazil and Argentina, the 2024 winter was nearly two degrees Celsius (about 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) colder than usual, and summer took its time to arrive.
The country's average annual temperature was 18.1 degrees Celsius, Mario Bidegain of the Uruguayan Meteorological Institute told AFP.
2017 had been Uruguay's warmest year on record since 1980, with an average of 18.8 degrees C.
But last year, said Bidegain, the country experienced "a near-historic cold spell" during the southern hemisphere winter in July and August, with frost, atypical in the country, recorded nationwide on several days.
According to the EU's Copernicus, the regions least affected by global warming in 2024 were those closest to the Earth's poles, particularly those in the southern hemisphere.
Global warming does not follow a uniform trend and cooler years can follow warmer ones.
The relatively moderate temperatures in Uruguay in 2024 illustrate this climate variability.
While there were no "significant changes to the (temperature) averages" in Uruguay, the country nevertheless experienced other "severe phenomena, both in quantity and quality," said Juan Luis Perez, a meteorologist with research company Nimbus.
"They have almost doubled and have become more intense. When it rains, the city (Montevideo) overflows and cars float in the streets," he said.
"The weather is more uncontrolled," added Perez, with weather forecasting models "no longer as reliable as they were a couple of years ago."
In Uruguay, as elsewhere, the long-term trend is undeniable: the country's average temperature has increased 1.3 degrees C over the last century.
M.A.Vaz--PC