Trader consensus on Polymarket favors 2026 ranking as the second-hottest year on record at 53% implied probability, with a solid 35.5% chance of first, driven by authoritative forecasts from NOAA, Copernicus, and Environment Canada projecting global mean surface temperatures around 1.35–1.53°C above pre-industrial levels—comparable to recent records set by 2024 (hottest) and 2025 (second- or third-warmest). Early 2026 started warm but not extreme, with January through March ranking as the fifth-warmest quarters in NOAA and Copernicus records, moderated by lingering La Niña cooling in the equatorial Pacific. Recent NOAA ENSO updates (April 2026) signal a likely El Niño emergence by May–July (61% chance), potentially amplifying second-half heat via enhanced atmospheric convection and reduced trade winds, sustaining the 11-year streak of record-warm years amid unabated greenhouse gas forcing. Upcoming seasonal outlooks from WMO and IRI will refine these trajectories.
Riepilogo sperimentale generato dall'AI con riferimento ai dati di Polymarket. Questo non è un consiglio di trading e non ha alcun ruolo nella risoluzione di questo mercato. · AggiornatoDove si collocherà il 2026 tra gli anni più caldi mai registrati?
Dove si collocherà il 2026 tra gli anni più caldi mai registrati?
2 53%
1 36%
4 5.0%
3 4.2%
$2,631,386 Vol.
$2,631,386 Vol.
1
36%
2
53%
3
4%
4
5%
5
<1%
6 o inferiore
2%
2 53%
1 36%
4 5.0%
3 4.2%
$2,631,386 Vol.
$2,631,386 Vol.
1
36%
2
53%
3
4%
4
5%
5
<1%
6 o inferiore
2%
Years will be ranked in descending order, starting with the hottest as number 1, the second hottest as number 2, etc.
If 2026 ties with any other year, it will resolve according to the place the year it ties with occupies.
This market will resolve immediately once the specified data becomes available, regardless of whether the figure for the relevant years is later revised.
The primary resolution source for this market will be the figure found in the table titled "Land-Ocean Temperature Index (C)" under the column "No_Smoothing" in the row "2026" (https://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/graphs/graph_data/Global_Mean_Estimates_based_on_Land_and_Ocean_Data/graph.txt). If NASA's "Global Temperature Index" is rendered permanently unavailable, other information from NASA may be used. If no information for 2026 is provided by NASA by March 1, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve based on a consensus of credible reporting.
Mercato aperto: Nov 12, 2025, 5:44 PM ET
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Years will be ranked in descending order, starting with the hottest as number 1, the second hottest as number 2, etc.
If 2026 ties with any other year, it will resolve according to the place the year it ties with occupies.
This market will resolve immediately once the specified data becomes available, regardless of whether the figure for the relevant years is later revised.
The primary resolution source for this market will be the figure found in the table titled "Land-Ocean Temperature Index (C)" under the column "No_Smoothing" in the row "2026" (https://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/graphs/graph_data/Global_Mean_Estimates_based_on_Land_and_Ocean_Data/graph.txt). If NASA's "Global Temperature Index" is rendered permanently unavailable, other information from NASA may be used. If no information for 2026 is provided by NASA by March 1, 2027, 11:59 PM ET, this market will resolve based on a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x2F5e3684c...Trader consensus on Polymarket favors 2026 ranking as the second-hottest year on record at 53% implied probability, with a solid 35.5% chance of first, driven by authoritative forecasts from NOAA, Copernicus, and Environment Canada projecting global mean surface temperatures around 1.35–1.53°C above pre-industrial levels—comparable to recent records set by 2024 (hottest) and 2025 (second- or third-warmest). Early 2026 started warm but not extreme, with January through March ranking as the fifth-warmest quarters in NOAA and Copernicus records, moderated by lingering La Niña cooling in the equatorial Pacific. Recent NOAA ENSO updates (April 2026) signal a likely El Niño emergence by May–July (61% chance), potentially amplifying second-half heat via enhanced atmospheric convection and reduced trade winds, sustaining the 11-year streak of record-warm years amid unabated greenhouse gas forcing. Upcoming seasonal outlooks from WMO and IRI will refine these trajectories.
Riepilogo sperimentale generato dall'AI con riferimento ai dati di Polymarket. Questo non è un consiglio di trading e non ha alcun ruolo nella risoluzione di questo mercato. · Aggiornato
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