The departure from the long-term averages for October easily eclipsed the 0.34 degree anomaly set only a year earlier, the JMA said. (See chart below). Record temperatures for another month - this time October. Credit:Tony Derix/BoM Scientists say El Ninos add about 0.1 to 0.2 degrees to global temperatures. This boost is coming on top of background warming of about 0.9 degrees over the past century, increasing the likelihood that heat records will continue to fall. The Japanese record reading is likely to be matched by other agencies in coming days. It suggests 2015 - already the warmest by far for the first nine months - will easily top 2014 as the hottest year since reliable data has been collected.

The latest global temperature results also come as leaders and delegates prepare to meet in Paris this month to hammer out a new treaty to combat climate change by curbing greenhouse gas emissions. The summit is expected to proceed despite last Friday's terrorist attacks that killed at least 129 people in the French capital. Australian heatwaves October was hot in many parts of the world, including in Australia, where the national reading was the most abnormally warm period for any month monitored since the Bureau of Meteorology was formed in 1910. Maximum temperatures averaged 3.44 degrees above the long-run average, the bureau said. Almost all of southern Australia recorded its hottest October, driven higher by a big heatwave across the region. (See chart below.)

Some early-season heat records may also be challenged this week, as searing inland temperatures move eastwards. Sydney, for instance, is forecast to reach 39 degrees on Friday with western regions such as Penrith and Richmond looking at tops of 41 degrees. Readings in the low to mid-40s over coming days are expected in a region stretching from South Australia to the western areas of NSW, Queensland and Victoria. Even the Top End is expecting extreme heatwave conditions for most of the coming week. 100 quadrillion kilojoules Driving global temperatures higher this year is the big El Nino event in the Pacific. During such years, wind patterns shift, allowing unusual heat to beat up in the central and eastern equatorial areas.

The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said a six million-square kilometre region on the Pacific, dubbed Nino3.4, had warmed by more than 2 degrees. (See chart below.) The heat required to warm just the top two metres of that region by that amount would require 100 quadrillion kilojoules, NOAA's Emily Becker said in a website post. That's 100 followed by 15 zeros. That tally is about equal to the total energy consumed each year in the US, she said. The current El Nino continues to strengthen and is expected to peak either late this year or early next year, according to NOAA in a separate report on Monday. The view is similar to one released by the Bureau of Meteorology last week. The event is likely to break up by late autumn or early winter in the southern hemisphere although there are some signs it may linger longer than expected because of exceptionally warm conditions in the northern Pacific.

The El Nino current ranks as the second strongest on record according to data going back to 1950, NOAA said: