The summer of 2022 gave not only large-scale wildfires and heat waves to the world but also the record highest temperatures.
According to the latest data from U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Europe and China recorded their hottest summer in history, while the Northern Hemisphere saw the second-hottest summer.
Meanwhile, this summer was recorded as the second-hottest for North America and Asia, and the fifth-hottest for Earth since 1880, according to a report released by the NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) on Wednesday.
"The contiguous U.S. had its third-warmest summer on record ... Spain had its warmest summer on record with an average departure of 2.2 degrees Celsius from the 1981-2010 reference period," added the study.
NASA also ranked this summer period as tied with 2019 for the warmest on record globally.
NOAA also found that August was the planet's sixth-warmest one on record and the warmest August over Northern Hemisphere land areas.
Earlier this month, the European Union's Earth observation satellite program said that this summer has been the hottest in Europe's recorded history, with August seeing a record high temperature.
"In Europe, the average temperature in August was the highest on record for both the month of August and the summer (June-August) as a whole," added the Copernicus Climate Change Service.
On Aug. 31, France's weather bureau termed this year's summer season the second hottest in the last century. Hungary reported 2022 as the hottest summer in 121 years, with median temperatures reaching 22.8 degrees Celsius (73 degrees Fahrenheit) on Sept. 5.