Temperatures were above average throughout most of North America, South America, Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania and Antarctica. Parts of Europe, southern and north-central North America, northern and central South America, western and eastern Africa, southwestern and central eastern Asia, southwestern Oceania and Antarctica experienced record-warm temperatures this month. Sea surface temperatures were above average across much of the northern, western and southwestern Pacific as well as the Atlantic and the Indian Ocean. Record-warm temperatures covered 20% of the world’s surface this September, which was the highest percentage of any month since the start of records in 1951.
Temperatures were near to cooler than average across parts of southern South America and central Russia. Sea surface temperatures were near to below average over parts of the southeastern Pacific Ocean. Less than 1% of the world’s surface had a record-cold September.
Sea Ice Extent
September 2023 set a record for the lowest global September sea ice extent on record. This primarily resulted from record-low sea ice extent in the Antarctic, which saw its fifth consecutive month with the lowest sea ice extent on record. Globally, September 2023 sea ice extent was 590,000 square miles less than the previous record low from September 2016.
The Arctic sea ice extent for September 2023 ranked as the fifth smallest in the satellite record at 1.69 million square miles, or 470,000 square miles below the 1991–2020 average. On September 19, the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) announced that Arctic sea ice likely reached its annual minimum extent of 1.63 million square miles. This year’s Arctic minimum ranks sixth lowest in the 45-year record.
Sea ice extent in the Antarctic ranked lowest on record at 6.49 million square miles, which was 700,000 square miles below the 1991–2020 average. NSIDC announced a record-low annual Antarctic sea ice maximum extent at 6.55 million square miles on September 10. This set a record low maximum in the satellite record that dates back to 1979, beating out the previous record low set in 1986 by 398,000 square miles.