Trader consensus heavily favors March 2026 ranking 4th or lower on the global temperature record, driven by the extraordinarily high baselines set by recent El Niño-fueled anomalies: March 2024 as the hottest on record (+1.09°C above 1991-2020 average per Copernicus ERA5), followed closely by 2016 and 2023. NOAA and ECMWF forecasts indicate neutral-to-La Niña conditions persisting into 2026, suppressing global temperatures below those peaks amid a +0.2°C/decade warming trend. This positioning aligns with historical precedents where consecutive top-3 Marches are rare without persistent strong El Niño. Challenges could arise from an unforeseen El Niño resurgence by late 2025 or amplified Arctic sea ice loss, though model ensembles assign these low probabilities.
Polymarketデータを参照したAI生成の実験的な要約 · 更新日4番目またはそれ以下 96.6%
観測史上1位の暑さ 1.8%
3番目に暑い 1.1%
観測史上2番目の暑さ <1%
$195,595 Vol.
$195,595 Vol.
観測史上1位の暑さ
2%
観測史上2番目の暑さ
<1%
3番目に暑い
1%
4番目またはそれ以下
97%
4番目またはそれ以下 96.6%
観測史上1位の暑さ 1.8%
3番目に暑い 1.1%
観測史上2番目の暑さ <1%
$195,595 Vol.
$195,595 Vol.
観測史上1位の暑さ
2%
観測史上2番目の暑さ
<1%
3番目に暑い
1%
4番目またはそれ以下
97%
Note: If March 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 "Mar" (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 March 2026 is provided by NASA by April 30, 2026, 11:59 PM ET, a consensus of credible sources will be used to resolve this market.
マーケット開始日: Feb 26, 2026, 5:45 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Trader consensus heavily favors March 2026 ranking 4th or lower on the global temperature record, driven by the extraordinarily high baselines set by recent El Niño-fueled anomalies: March 2024 as the hottest on record (+1.09°C above 1991-2020 average per Copernicus ERA5), followed closely by 2016 and 2023. NOAA and ECMWF forecasts indicate neutral-to-La Niña conditions persisting into 2026, suppressing global temperatures below those peaks amid a +0.2°C/decade warming trend. This positioning aligns with historical precedents where consecutive top-3 Marches are rare without persistent strong El Niño. Challenges could arise from an unforeseen El Niño resurgence by late 2025 or amplified Arctic sea ice loss, though model ensembles assign these low probabilities.
Polymarketデータを参照したAI生成の実験的な要約 · 更新日
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