Tight trader odds for April 2026's global surface temperature ranking—favoring 2nd hottest at 46.5%—stem primarily from uncertainty in ENSO forecasts, with NOAA projections indicating a likely La Niña fade by mid-2026 but potential for neutral or weak El Niño conditions that could challenge 2024's record (hottest April at +0.86°C anomaly per Copernicus). Differentiating factors include the warming baseline (0.2°C/decade trend accelerating post-2023 El Niño), where full El Niño recurrence boosts odds for 1st (42.5%), while prolonged cool phases drop to 4th+ (43%). Historical rankings (2024>2023>2016) and model ensembles highlight April's sensitivity to Pacific sea surface temperatures, with upcoming IRI updates key for resolution shifts.
Experimentelle KI-generierte Zusammenfassung mit Polymarket-Daten · Aktualisiert2026 April 1st, 2nd, 3rd hottest on record?
2026 April 1st, 2nd, 3rd hottest on record?
1st hottest 43%
3rd hottest 43%
4th or lower 42%
2nd hottest 0
1st hottest
43%
2nd hottest
47%
3rd hottest
43%
4th or lower
42%
1st hottest 43%
3rd hottest 43%
4th or lower 42%
2nd hottest 0
1st hottest
43%
2nd hottest
47%
3rd hottest
43%
4th or lower
42%
Note: If April 2026 is tied for first, second, or third hottest with another year, it will qualify for the bracket it ties with.
The primary resolution source for this market will be the figures found in the table titled "GLOBAL Land-Ocean Temperature Index in 0.01 degrees Celsius" under the column "Apr" (https://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/tabledata_v4/GLB.Ts+dSST.txt). If NASA's "Global Temperature Index" is rendered permanently unavailable, other information from NASA may be used.
If no information for April 2026 is provided by NASA by May 31, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, a consensus of credible sources will be used to resolve this market.
Markt eröffnet: Mar 24, 2026, 6:05 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Tight trader odds for April 2026's global surface temperature ranking—favoring 2nd hottest at 46.5%—stem primarily from uncertainty in ENSO forecasts, with NOAA projections indicating a likely La Niña fade by mid-2026 but potential for neutral or weak El Niño conditions that could challenge 2024's record (hottest April at +0.86°C anomaly per Copernicus). Differentiating factors include the warming baseline (0.2°C/decade trend accelerating post-2023 El Niño), where full El Niño recurrence boosts odds for 1st (42.5%), while prolonged cool phases drop to 4th+ (43%). Historical rankings (2024>2023>2016) and model ensembles highlight April's sensitivity to Pacific sea surface temperatures, with upcoming IRI updates key for resolution shifts.
Experimentelle KI-generierte Zusammenfassung mit Polymarket-Daten · Aktualisiert
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