Visualise climate change for your city.

It is normal for weather conditions to be quite different from year to year - some years are hotter, some are colder; some are wetter, some are drier. However, for many places on earth, strong trends can be observed. In many cases, the trend is for temperatures to be higher on average. The graphics below are designed to give you an idea of how the climate has changed to this date for the place where you live.


To look up your city, start typing its name:
Metric units Imperial units

This webapp was coded by Julien Dix Yasar , the source code is available on github . Everyone is kindly invited to contribute to this app.

Weather data is provided by open-meteo.com and is based on ERA5-reanalysis data , which itself comes from the amazing copernicus program. The Icons is created by Freepik - Flaticon .

Please note that the underlying data is based on a ~11km grid model. Usually, this makes no difference as climate conditions don't often change that much within such small distances. However, in extreme situations, the data displayed can be misleading, especially when looking at places in small valleys. For example, looking at the data for Quito, Ecuador actually displays data for the surrounding mountains because that's just where the grid points fall, leading to suprising numbers – the climate in the mountains obviously is very different from the climate in the valley below.