Trader consensus favors a March 2026 global temperature anomaly of 1.15–1.24ºC, driven by the anticipated cooling from a La Niña event fading into neutral ENSO conditions by early 2026, offsetting the anthropogenic warming trend of about 0.2ºC per decade. Copernicus ERA5 data confirms 2024's record annual anomaly near 1.55ºC above pre-industrial levels, fueled by the 2023–2024 El Niño, but NOAA CFSv2 and ECMWF models project a reversion toward the 1.2ºC multi-year mean for March under neutral Pacific conditions. Recent IRI/CPC updates show 70% La Niña probability through April 2025, dropping thereafter, while fading Hunga Tonga stratospheric aerosols reduce short-term boosts; upcoming seasonal forecasts will refine these market-implied odds.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · UpdatedMarch 2026 Temperature Increase (ºC)
March 2026 Temperature Increase (ºC)
1.20–1.24ºC 40%
1.15–1.19ºC 30%
1.25–1.29ºC 16.3%
1.10–1.14ºC 10%
$148,240 Vol.
$148,240 Vol.
<1.10ºC
3%
1.10–1.14ºC
10%
1.15–1.19ºC
30%
1.20–1.24ºC
40%
1.25–1.29ºC
16%
>1.29ºC
3%
1.20–1.24ºC 40%
1.15–1.19ºC 30%
1.25–1.29ºC 16.3%
1.10–1.14ºC 10%
$148,240 Vol.
$148,240 Vol.
<1.10ºC
3%
1.10–1.14ºC
10%
1.15–1.19ºC
30%
1.20–1.24ºC
40%
1.25–1.29ºC
16%
>1.29ºC
3%
An anomaly within a named bracket for March 2026 is necessary and sufficient to resolve this market immediately once the data becomes available, regardless of whether the figure for March 2026 is later revised.
The primary resolution source for this market will be the figure found in the table titled "GLOBAL Land-Ocean Temperature Index in 0.01 degrees Celsius" under the column "Mar" in the row "2026" (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 February 2026 is provided by NASA by May 1, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve to the lowest range bracket.
Market Opened: Feb 27, 2026, 6:18 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus favors a March 2026 global temperature anomaly of 1.15–1.24ºC, driven by the anticipated cooling from a La Niña event fading into neutral ENSO conditions by early 2026, offsetting the anthropogenic warming trend of about 0.2ºC per decade. Copernicus ERA5 data confirms 2024's record annual anomaly near 1.55ºC above pre-industrial levels, fueled by the 2023–2024 El Niño, but NOAA CFSv2 and ECMWF models project a reversion toward the 1.2ºC multi-year mean for March under neutral Pacific conditions. Recent IRI/CPC updates show 70% La Niña probability through April 2025, dropping thereafter, while fading Hunga Tonga stratospheric aerosols reduce short-term boosts; upcoming seasonal forecasts will refine these market-implied odds.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated


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