Climate stripes show Berkshire is warming up
University of Reading has updated its world famous stripes
New climate stripes for Berkshire and cities and countries all over the world have been launched to mark Earth Day (Wednesday, 22 April).
The updated graphics, which now include an additional stripe to represent temperatures from 2025, show the rapid impact that global warming is having on individual nations and regions. In January, the global climate stripes graphic was updated to add a dark red stripe to represent the global temperature in 2025 - Earth’s third warmest year on record.
The release comes as people all over the world get ready to share the graphics for #ShowYourStripesDay on Friday, 20 June 2026.
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Professor Ed Hawkins, the University of Reading scientist who created the climate stripes, said: "Earth Day is a moment to stop and think about the planet we want to live on. A planet with clean air, clean water, stable seasons and thriving wildlife. That is what we are fighting for, and it is still within reach.
“Every new stripe shows how fast the world is heating up. Rapid warming means more floods, more droughts, more wildfires and more disruption to the food and water that billions of people depend on.
"What happens next rests on the choices we make now and in the future. Sharing the climate stripes with friends, family and colleagues starts the vital everyday conversations we need to have about how we should all respond to these challenges. The time for action is now."