February 2026 was Earth’s fifth-warmest February on record » Yale Climate Connections


February 2026 was the world’s fifth-warmest February in analyses of global weather data going back to 1850, NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information, or NCEI, reported March 11. The European Copernicus Climate Change Service also rated February 2026 as the fifth-warmest February on record, while NASA had it tied for fourth-warmest. The global-average temperature for December 2025 to February 2026 was the fifth-highest on record.

Departure of temperature from average for February 2026.
Figure 1. Departure of temperature from average for February 2026, the world’s fifth-warmest February since record-keeping began in 1850. Record-high February temperatures covered 5.1% of the Earth’s surface. No land or ocean areas observed record-cold February temperatures. (Image credit: NOAA/NCEI)

Global land areas had their sixth-warmest February on record in 2026, while global oceans had their second-warmest February, falling just 0.16 degrees Celsius (0.29°F) shy of the record set in 2024, NOAA said. Africa had its second-warmest February, and South America and Asia experienced their seventh- and eighth-warmest February, respectively. While North America, Europe, Oceania, the Arctic, and the Antarctic all experienced above-average February temperatures, none ranked among the top 10.

Snow cover in February was well below average over the Western U.S. and much of Asia and Europe. Overall, Northern Hemisphere snow cover during February 2026 was the third-lowest since records began in 1967.

Remember all that snow that fell from the Carolinas to Boston? I bet you assume this has been quite a snow season overall. Well, for the Lower 48, this is the least snowy season (through February) for any year since at least 1940-41 when looking at all years through February. Thanks humans!

— Climatologist49 (@climatologist49.bsky.social) 2026-03-09T01:19:05.902Z

Warm and dry in the U.S.

As detailed in our post from Tuesday, in the contiguous U.S., winter 2025-26 was the second-warmest and fifth-driest in records going back to 1895. February was the fourth-warmest and fifth-driest February on record. According to the March 5 U.S. Drought Monitor report, about 55% of the continental U.S. was in drought at the beginning of March, up from the 43% coverage at the beginning of the year. Snow-covered area across the Western United States was 38% of the average for February, ranking last in the 26-year satellite record. It was the second month in a row to reach a record low.

Folks still thawing out might be wondering: How bad a U.S. winter was it overall? Very bad – that is, if you’re concerned about long-term warming and intensified drought impacts. (2nd warmest and 5th driest on record.) @climateconnections.bsky.socialyaleclimateconnections.org/2026/03/we-j…

— Bob Henson (@bhensonweather.bsky.social) 2026-03-09T22:05:42.867Z

An El Niño event looking more likely to develop this year

A weak La Niña event continues in the Eastern Pacific, NOAA reported in its February monthly discussion of the state of the El Niño/Southern Oscillation, or ENSO (the next discussion is scheduled for March 12). La Niña conditions are expected to end in the February-April 2026 period (60% chance), with ENSO-neutral conditions then persisting through August (56% chance). An increasing chance of El Niño conditions is predicted as 2026 progresses, according to the Columbia University International Research Institute for Climate and Society forecast issued February 19.

The forecast for the August-September-October peak of hurricane season called for a 61% chance of El Niño, a 34% chance of ENSO-neutral, and a 5% chance of La Niña. NOAA is giving a 35% chance of moderate or stronger El Niño conditions if an El Niño event develops. El Niño conditions tend to suppress Atlantic hurricane activity through an increase in wind shear, but La Niña conditions tend to have the opposite effect. The most recent ENSO forecast from the European model was very bullish on a significant El Niño event developing by late spring or summer and continuing through at least fall 2026.

Seeing this ENSO forecast shared a bit. Let me put my ENSO hat on for a sec to say a couple things.1. This uses a 1981-2010 climo which will boost the anomaly numbers.2. This doesn’t use the Relative Oceanic Nino index (RONI), which would slash these anomaly numbers by, my guess, 0.5C1/2

— Tom Di Liberto (@tdiliberto.bsky.social) 2026-03-06T16:42:12.286Z

Last month, NOAA switched to using the Relative Oceanic Niño Index, or RONI, as its standard ENSO monitoring tool. This tool uses sea surface temperatures across the tropics to adjust the Oceanic Niño Index, making it a better gauge of how ENSO is expressed in a warming climate.

Read: A new and better way to keep tabs on El Niño

Arctic sea ice: third-lowest February extent on record

Arctic sea ice extent during February 2026 was virtually tied with February 2017 as the third-lowest in the 48-year satellite record, behind only February 2025 and February 2018, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. Overtopping this depleted ice was an atmosphere more frigid than the recent norm, as the Arctic had its 45th warmest February since 1850 – but the coldest since 2009.

 Antarctic sea ice extent in February 2026 was near the long-term average, ranking as the 21st-lowest in the 48-year record. The Antarctic had above-average temperatures in February, ranking as the 13th-warmest since 1850. Antarctic sea ice reached its minimum extent for the year, at 2.58 million square kilometers (996,000 square miles) on February 26, 2026, ranking 16th-lowest in the 48-year satellite record.

February 2026 #Arctic sea ice extent was the 3rd lowest on record for the month…This was 1,200,000 km² below the 1981-2010 average. February ice extent is decreasing at about 2.72% per decade. Data: @nsidc.bsky.social (nsidc.org/data/seaice_…)

— Zack Labe (@zacklabe.com) 2026-03-03T13:07:48.815Z

Notable global heat and cold marks for February 2026

Weather records expert Maximiliano Herrera has documented the records listed below in February. Follow him on Bluesky: @extremetemps.bsky.social or Twitter: @extremetemps.

– Hottest temperature in the Northern Hemisphere: 43.8°C (110.8°F) at Bokoro, Chad, Feb. 15;
– Coldest temperature in the Northern Hemisphere: -65.3°C (-85.6°F) at Summit, Greenland, Feb. 24;
– Hottest temperature in the Southern Hemisphere: 47.3°C (117.1°F) at Carnarvon Airport, Australia, Feb. 2; and
– Coldest temperature in the Southern Hemisphere: -57.7°C (-71.9°F) at Dome Fuji, Antarctica, Feb. 22.

One all-time national/territorial cold record beaten or tied as of the end of February

  • Cuba: 0.0°C (32.0°F) at Indio Hatuey, Feb. 3

Major weather stations in February: 2 all-time heat records, 10 all-time cold records

Among global stations with a record of at least 40 years, two set, not just tied, an all-time heat record in February, and 10 stations set an all-time cold record:

Manokwari (Indonesia) max. 36.5°C, February 2
Jucarito (Cuba) min. 6.8°C, February 2
Santa Cruz del Sur (Cuba) min. 6.8°C, February 2
Indio Hatuey (Cuba) min. 0.0°C, February 3: New national record low for Cuba
Bermuda Airport (Bermuda ,UK) min. 6.6°C, February 8
Fuchu (Japan) min. -8.6°C, February 9
Oume (Japan) min. -10.3°C, February 9
Hatoyama (Japan) min. -11.1°C, February 9
Kanuma (Japan) min. -11.7°C, February 9
Kashima (Japan) min. -7.5°C, February 9
Himi (Japan) min. -10.8°C, February 10
Franceville (Gabon) max. 36.2°C, February 16

The latest monthly status of key greenhouse gases shown side-by-side. These gases trap heat in our atmosphere and drive wide-ranging impacts across the Earth system.For more data/info: gml.noaa.gov/ccgg/

— Zack Labe (@zacklabe.com) 2026-03-11T12:30:20.819Z

Twelve nations or territories have set monthly all-time heat records in 2026

  • Jan. (5): U.S. Virgin Islands, Saba, Sao Tome and Principe, Congo Brazzaville, Aruba
  • Feb (7): French Southern Territories, Armenia, Iran, Turkmenistan, U.S. Virgin Islands, USA, Honduras

Three nations or territories have set monthly all-time cold records in 2026

  • Jan. (1): Cocos Islands
  • Feb. (2): Bahamas, Belize

Bob Henson contributed to this post

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