To be sure, some of this is the result of a monster El Nino weather pattern lingering in the Pacific Ocean. But the broader trend is clear: We live on a planet that is warming rapidly, with no end in sight.
Since 1980, the world has set a new annual temperature record roughly every three years, and 15 of the hottest 16 years ever measured are in the 21st century.
The El Nino that started last year produced some of the hottest temperatures ever witnessed across great swaths of the equatorial Pacific.
By some measures, this may now be the most extreme El Nino on record. It has triggered powerful typhoons, spoiled harvests in Africa, and contributed to vast fires in Indonesia. In California, El Nino precipitation is replenishing the snowpack and beginning to refill drought-ravished reservoirs.
Results from the world's top monitoring agencies vary slightly, but NASA, NOAA, and the Japan Meteorological Agency all agree that February was unprecedented. Its heat was experienced differently around the world, though few regions escaped it entirely.
The most extreme heat swept the Arctic, where ice levels were at the lowest on record for this time of year.
The heat in the Arctic is especially worrisome, as the region provides a powerful feedback loop for global warming. As the ice melts, it reflects less of the sun's warming rays back into space.
The permafrost also serves as a giant repository for carbon, which is released as carbon dioxide and methane as the ice melts. Melting ice is therefore both a result of current global warming and a trigger for future warming.
While El Nino conditions have peaked, they're still strong and may continue to a lesser extent through June, according to the US Climate Prediction Centre.
Then it's pretty much a coin toss whether the Pacific returns to more neutral temperatures or even a cooler La Nina pattern. Either way, the planetary warming trend continues.