(8 Jul 2024)
RESTRICTION SUMMARY:
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Mount Arafat, Saudi Arabia – 15 June 2024
1. Pilgrims at Al-Rahma hill under water misting columns
2. Close of water spraying
3. Pilgrims under water misting columns
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bonn, Germany – 5 July 2024
4. SOUNDBITE (English) Nicolas Julien, Copernicus climate scientist:
"June 2024 was the warmest June on record globally. It continues a streak of monthly global temperature records that started in June 2023, making it the 13 month in a row with a monthly global temperature record."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Mount Arafat, Saudi Arabia – 15 June 2024
5. Various of Pilgrims taking free water from fridges on the street
6. Women pilgrims taking cold bottles of water from boxes
7. Close of boxed with water bottles
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bonn, Germany – 5 July 2024
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Nicolas Julien, Copernicus climate scientist:
"The fact that at least the Copernicus data showed that there has been this 12 month streak at or above 1.5 (degrees Celsius). It’s definitely very consequential. It’s a stark warning, that we are getting closer to this very important limit set by the Paris Agreement."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: New Delhi, India – 29 May 2024
9. People walking in front of India’s Presidential palace under heat haze
10. Iconic war memorial India Gate seen through heat haze
11. Various of people drinking water at a mobile water trolly
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bonn, Germany – 5 July 2024
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Nicolas Julien, Copernicus climate scientist:
"The global temperature is continuing, continues to increase at a rapid pace. And the records have been also shattered by very substantial margin over the past, what, 13 months? So that was quite remarkable as well."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Veracruz, Mexico – 16 June 2024
13. 82-year-old Veracruz resident Margarita Salazar Pérez seated at her bed next to fan
14. Salazar Pérez wiping her sweat
15. Close fan at her home
16. Top shot of Salazar Pérez talking with neighbor
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bonn, Germany – 5 July 2024
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Nicolas Julien, Copernicus climate scientist:
"There has been a lot of attention paid in the past year or so, 13 months, to these global temperature records being broken. We have seen the consequences of climate change, these extreme climate events happening for many years now. So this started before June 2023. They will continue even if the streak of global temperature records ends."
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ARCHIVE: Oroville, California – 2 July 2024
++NIGHT SHOTS++
18. Various of hillside in flames, aircraft dropping water
19. Flames and smoke around road, fire trucks on road
20. Burning structure
STORYLINE:
Earth’s more than year-long streak of record-shattering hot months kept on simmering through June, according to the European climate service Copernicus.
The global temperature in June was record warm for the 13th straight month and it marked the 12th straight month that the world was 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than pre-industrial times, Copernicus said in an early Monday announcement.
“It’s a stark warning that we are getting closer to this very important limit set by the Paris Agreement,” Copernicus senior climate scientist Nicolas Julien said in an interview.
That 1.5 degree temperature mark is important because that’s the warming limit nearly all the countries in the world agreed upon in the 2015 Paris climate agreement.
AP Video produced by Teresa de Miguel
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