2026 forecasts shatter the myth of a hottest-year certainty, revealing a near-lock for top-four status but just 1% odds of dethroning 2024’s El Niño peak.
Story Snapshot
- ECCC predicts 1.44 ± 0.09 °C above pre-industrial for 2026, matching 2023 and 2025 warmth.
- >99% chance hotter than all pre-2023 years; only 1% shot at breaking 2024’s 1.55 °C record.
- 13th straight year ≥1.0 °C above baseline; 12% risk of topping Paris 1.5 °C threshold.
- Potential mid-2026 El Niño could push extremes, per NOAA’s 62% odds.
- 2026-2030 poised as hottest five-year span ever modeled.
Forecast Origins and Precision Record
Environment and Climate Change Canada’s Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis released the 2026 forecast in early 2026. Dr. Bill Merryfield, lead scientist, projects global mean surface temperature at 1.44 ± 0.09 °C above 1850-1900 pre-industrial levels. This aligns with World Meteorological Organization data through 2025. ECCC’s 2025 prediction hit within 0.01 °C of observed 1.44 ± 0.13 °C. Models factor greenhouse gas forcing and ENSO cycles. UK Met Office corroborates at ~1.46 °C.
Recent Temperature Milestones
2024 claimed the record at 1.55 °C, boosted by El Niño. 2023 ranked second hottest; 2025 slotted third at ~1.44 °C, nearly tying 2023. No year before 2023 exceeded 1.3 °C above pre-industrial. The past decade delivered 10 straight warmest years. Early 2026 stayed hot: January fifth-warmest globally, March tied 2024’s second-warmest at 1.31 °C above 20th-century average despite ENSO-neutral conditions.
Stakeholders Driving Predictions
Dr. Bill Merryfield authored ECCC’s forecast, stating the 2024 record likely breaks on the next El Niño. Adam Scaife leads UK Met Office’s team, noting 2026 as the fourth straight year over 1.4 °C. WMO, NOAA, and Copernicus supply observational backbone. These agencies collaborate, aligning models with data. NOAA’s 62% El Niño probability for June-August 2026 influences outlooks. Betting platforms like Polymarket reflect trader bets: 56% for second-hottest, 34% for first.
Early 2026 Signals and El Niño Watch
March 2026 data keeps the year on track for elite rankings. High anomalies persist under ENSO-neutral start, hinting at brewing warmth. Fortune reports models eye 2026 heat akin to 2025, with 60% El Niño odds. Polymarket volumes exceed $400k per ranking. Full 2026 data resolves around March 2027. Traders weigh greenhouse dominance against La Niña risks, but consensus favors top-two contention if El Niño emerges.
2026 will be the hottest year on record, leading scientist predicts https://t.co/BoDPexpMwo in @newscientist pic.twitter.com/4H5UHTBPth
— HealthIT Policy (@HITpol) May 1, 2026
Implications for Weather and Policy
Short-term, sustained heat streaks amplify extreme weather risks worldwide, echoing 2024-2025 heatwaves. A 12% chance of breaching 1.5 °C in 2026 accelerates Paris Agreement pressures. Long-term, 2026-2030 models the hottest pentad. Global communities brace for intensified heat; U.S. West logged record winters amid snaps. Energy, agriculture, and insurance sectors adjust to trends. Modeling credibility strengthens as forecasts match reality.
Sources:
2026 likely to be among the four hottest years on record
UK’s Met Office warns 2026 will likely be among four warmest years on record
Climate change: Last 3 years hottest on record, forecast outlook, El Niño
Will 2026 be the hottest year ever? Odds & Predictions – Kalshi



