Preliminary ERA5 reanalysis data released in early April indicate the March 2026 global mean surface air temperature anomaly hovered near 1.27ºC above the pre-industrial (1850–1900) baseline, fueling the tight trader consensus between the 1.25–1.29ºC (44.8%) and >1.29ºC (41.9%) outcomes as final adjustments remain pending. This positioning reflects a slight cooling from February's fifth-warmest ranking amid a La Niña-to-ENSO-neutral transition (55% chance through mid-2026 per NOAA), tempered by persistent anthropogenic warming trends and regional extremes like the record-shattering Southwest U.S. heat dome. Key differentiators include Arctic amplification uncertainties and lagged ocean observations; official Copernicus and NOAA bulletins expected mid-April could shift model consensus.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket · AtualizadoMarço de 2026 Aumento de temperatura (ºC)
Março de 2026 Aumento de temperatura (ºC)
1,25–1,29ºC 43.0%
>1,29ºC 41.9%
1,20–1,24ºC 9%
1,15–1,19ºC 2.2%
$259,043 Vol.
$259,043 Vol.
<1,10ºC
1%
1,10–1,14ºC
1%
1,15–1,19ºC
2%
1,20–1,24ºC
9%
1,25–1,29ºC
47%
>1,29ºC
42%
1,25–1,29ºC 43.0%
>1,29ºC 41.9%
1,20–1,24ºC 9%
1,15–1,19ºC 2.2%
$259,043 Vol.
$259,043 Vol.
<1,10ºC
1%
1,10–1,14ºC
1%
1,15–1,19ºC
2%
1,20–1,24ºC
9%
1,25–1,29ºC
47%
>1,29ºC
42%
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.
Mercado Aberto: Feb 27, 2026, 6:18 PM ET
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...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.
Resolver
0x69c47De9D...Preliminary ERA5 reanalysis data released in early April indicate the March 2026 global mean surface air temperature anomaly hovered near 1.27ºC above the pre-industrial (1850–1900) baseline, fueling the tight trader consensus between the 1.25–1.29ºC (44.8%) and >1.29ºC (41.9%) outcomes as final adjustments remain pending. This positioning reflects a slight cooling from February's fifth-warmest ranking amid a La Niña-to-ENSO-neutral transition (55% chance through mid-2026 per NOAA), tempered by persistent anthropogenic warming trends and regional extremes like the record-shattering Southwest U.S. heat dome. Key differentiators include Arctic amplification uncertainties and lagged ocean observations; official Copernicus and NOAA bulletins expected mid-April could shift model consensus.
Resumo experimental gerado por IA com dados do Polymarket · Atualizado
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