Hong Kong logs one of 6th warmest years since records began, with second-highest number of hot nights and days in 2022
- Annual average temperature in 2022 was 23.9 degrees Celsius, according to city’s weather forecaster
- Hottest day last year was July 24, when the temperature soared to 36.1 degrees
![The annual average temperature last year was 23.9 degrees Celsius, according to the weather forecaster. Photo: Jelly Tse](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/01/09/f8130e40-d92f-460e-a204-686aaeb66e9e_cec55e06.jpg?itok=tXODZj9a&v=1673266640)
Hong Kong last year experienced one of its sixth warmest years and the second-highest number of hot nights and days since records began, according to the city’s weather forecaster.
The Observatory on Monday said the annual average temperature last year was 23.9 degrees Celsius, the same as the figure recorded in 2002, 2017 and 2018.
“With a record-breaking hot July and the warmest autumn from September to November, the weather was warmer than usual in 2022 … and among the sixth warmest since records began in 1884,” the Observatory said.
![The city last year experienced one of its sixth warmest years since records began. Photo: Elson Li The city last year experienced one of its sixth warmest years since records began. Photo: Elson Li](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/01/09/e4464584-c19b-4435-a210-6efb45ac1dab_80025749.jpg)
The forecaster added that last year’s annual average temperature was 0.4 degrees above the climatological normal, a figure calculated using data spanning from 1991 to 2020.
The city also logged an annual average maximum temperature of 26.7 degrees last year, making it the fifth highest on record, while the annual average minimum temperature of 22 degrees was one of the seventh highest.
Hong Kong in 2022 had 52 hot nights, with nighttime temperatures reaching 28 degrees or above, including a record-breaking streak of 21 hot nights for three weeks in July. The Observatory also logged 52 hot days last year, with daytime temperatures reaching 33 degrees or above.
The number of hot nights and days recorded last year marked the second-highest on record after 2021.
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