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TwitterBased on current monthly figures, on average, German climate has gotten a bit warmer. The average temperature for January 2025 was recorded at around 2 degrees Celsius, compared to 1.5 degrees a year before. In the broader context of climate change, average monthly temperatures are indicative of where the national climate is headed and whether attempts to control global warming are successful. Summer and winter Average summer temperature in Germany fluctuated in recent years, generally between 18 to 19 degrees Celsius. The season remains generally warm, and while there may not be as many hot and sunny days as in other parts of Europe, heat waves have occurred. In fact, 2023 saw 11.5 days with a temperature of at least 30 degrees, though this was a decrease compared to the year before. Meanwhile, average winter temperatures also fluctuated, but were higher in recent years, rising over four degrees on average in 2024. Figures remained in the above zero range since 2011. Numbers therefore suggest that German winters are becoming warmer, even if individual regions experiencing colder sub-zero snaps or even more snowfall may disagree. Rain, rain, go away Average monthly precipitation varied depending on the season, though sometimes figures from different times of the year were comparable. In 2024, the average monthly precipitation was highest in May and September, although rainfalls might increase in October and November with the beginning of the cold season. In the past, torrential rains have led to catastrophic flooding in Germany, with one of the most devastating being the flood of July 2021. Germany is not immune to the weather changing between two extremes, e.g. very warm spring months mostly without rain, when rain might be wished for, and then increased precipitation in other months where dry weather might be better, for example during planting and harvest seasons. Climate change remains on the agenda in all its far-reaching ways.
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TwitterThis statistic displays the average maximum monthly temperature in Germany over the past 20 years. It shows that over the past twenty years the month with the highest average maximum temperature has been July, with an average temperature of **** degrees Celsius. On average, January has been the coldest month.
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This dataset, provides detailed weather and climate statistics for major cities in Germany from 2015 to 2023.
It includes rainfall amounts, temperatures, humidity levels, and other geographical and climatic details, making it ideal for analyzing weather patterns, climate change, and their impacts across different regions.
City: Name of the city.
Latitude: City's latitude in degrees.
Longitude: City's longitude in degrees.
Month: The month number (1-12).
Year: The year of the data.
Rainfall (mm): Rainfall amount in millimeters.
Elevation (m): City’s elevation above sea level in meters.
Climate_Type: The climate classification of the city.
Temperature (°C): Average temperature for the month in Celsius.
Humidity (%): Average humidity level for the month in percentage.
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TwitterIn June 2025, the average temperature in Berlin was **** degrees Celsius. This was an increase compared to the June a year ago.
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TwitterThe dataset provides official temperature data measured from 513 weather stations in Germany from 1990 to 2021.
The original data are provided by the German Meteorological Service (DWD, Deutscher Wetterdienst) via the OpenData area of the Climate Data Center (CDC). These data are provided in 1611 files, resulting in > 500 million rows of measurement information (or missing values), a format that is poorly suited for further analysis.
Therefore, the data are converted from "long format" to "wide format". The result is a time series with 10 minute frequency containing one column per weather station. The exact columns in the file are: - MESS_DATUM: the datetime values of the time series, representing the index of the time series - list of weather station ids: one column per weather station, represented by the weather station id
From the five numerical measurement values of the original data, only "air temperature at 2m height in °C" was kept.
In addition to the extracted temperature data, a notebook is provided which can be used to extract the other four types of measurements in the same format.
The following files are provided in this dataset: - german_temperature_data_1990_2021.csv, containing the extracted original data (download and transformation, see this notebook). - german_temperature_data_1996_2021_from_selected_weather_stations.csv, containing a selection of the original data from 55 weather stations that have continuously provided a high amount of measurements from 1996-2021 (and thus no change in distribution over time). For the selection process, see this notebook. - zehn_min_tu_Beschreibung_Stationen.txt, additional information about the weather stations. - DESCRIPTION_obsgermany_climate_10min_tu_historical_en.pdf, the official data set description.
The terms of use are described by https://opendata.dwd.de/climate_environment/CDC/Nutzungsbedingungen_German.pdf and https://gdz.bkg.bund.de.
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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Temperature in Germany increased to 11.19 celsius in 2024 from 10.89 celsius in 2023. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Germany Average Temperature.
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TwitterData sets of current German weather stations updated hourly or every twelve hours. Data sets, in German, include: * Daily mean values ??of temperature, updated hourly. Daily archive since 29.1.2008 * Daily maximum and minimum temperature, updated every 12 hours. Daily archive since 21.7.2008 * Monthly mean values ??of temperature and deviation, updated daily . * Rainfall in the last 12 hours and monthly total, updated every 12 hours . * Monthly totals of precipitation and relative to langj. means in%, updated every 12 hours. Monthly Archive since Feb. 2008 * Air pressure and pressure tendency, updated hourly.
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Forecast: Average per Capita Monthly Mobile Data Use in Germany 2024 - 2028 Discover more data with ReportLinker!
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TwitterJune 2025 saw an average temperature of **** degrees Celsius for Hamburg, Germany.
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TwitterThis dataset contains outputs from two runs of a coupled atmosphere-ocean model at DKRZ in Hamburg. The runs were made in 1990 and they include a control run and an IPCC Scenario A run. We received 100 years of monthly 10-year climatologies of 2m temperature, precipitation, net surface solar radiation, and reflected surface solar radiation in GRIB0 format.
We also received outputs from 100-year transient runs (control, IPCC Scenario A, and IPCC Scenario D). These included monthly means of 59 parameters at the surface and 15 isobaric levels. We were notified in May 1993 that there was a problem with the vertical interpolation in those runs, so the data are no longer in our public distribution, but they remain in our archive.
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TwitterIn July 2025, the average precipitation amounted to 114 liters per square meter, a drastic increase compared to the previous month. The rainiest state in Germany was Saarland.
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Forecast: Average Monthly Fixed Broadband Data per User in Germany 2022 - 2026 Discover more data with ReportLinker!
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TwitterIn 2024, the average summer temperature in Germany was **** degrees Celsius. This was basically unchanged compared to the year before. While figures fluctuated during the given timeline, there were regular peaks, and in general, temperatures had grown noticeably since the 1960s. Not beating the heat German summers are getting hotter, and as desired as warm weather may be after months of winter (which, incidentally, also warms up year after year), this is another confirmation of global warming. Higher summer temperatures have various negative effects on both nature and humans. Recent years in Germany have seen a growing number of hot days with a temperature of at least 30 degrees, with **** recorded in 2023. However, this was a decrease compared to the year before. The number of deaths due to heat and sunlight had peaked in 2015. Rain or shine All the German states saw less sunshine hours in 2023 compared to the previous year. The sunniest states were Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria and Saarland. Meanwhile, summer precipitation in Germany varied greatly during the same timeline as presented in this graph, but 2022 was one of the dryest years yet.
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Forecast: Average Monthly Mobile Data Usage per SIM-card in Germany 2022 - 2026 Discover more data with ReportLinker!
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Twitterhttp://dcat-ap.de/def/licenses/geonutz/20130319http://dcat-ap.de/def/licenses/geonutz/20130319
The grids were derived from data from the DWD stations and qualitatively equivalent partner network stations in Germany, taking into account the altitude dependencies. pdf
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This document describes the monthly cooling degree hours calculated from public station data from the DWD Climate Data Center (CDC). The monthly cooling degree hours are calculated in accordance with DIN EN ISO 15927-6 as the cumulative hourly temperature differences between the air temperature and the reference temperature. Monthly cooling degree hours are calculated for the reference temperatures of 13, 16 and 18 degrees Celsius and stored in individual directories. Only those hours are counted that have an hourly air temperature value that is greater than the reference temperature. The data in the "historical" index are calculated monthly cooling degree days and cooling degree hours (cooling hours) from actual data that has passed the full quality control check. Monthly cooling degree hours (cooling degree hours) are only calculated for the stations for which all hourly values of the air temperature of a month are available. The data comes from DWD stations and partner network stations that are legally and qualitatively equivalent. It should be noted that the cooling degree hours can only be used for an initial estimate of the cooling requirement/adjustment of the energy requirement, since for cooling, in addition to the temperature used here, other influencing variables such as humidity, enthalpy or solar radiation play a major role ( ISO 15927, sheet 6; VDI 3807, sheet 1).
Further information: https://opendata.dwd.de/climate_environment/CDC/derived_germany/techn/monthly/cooling_degreehours/BESCHREIBUNG_derivgermany_techn_monthly_cooling_degreehours_cdh_historical_de.pdf
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TwitterTemperature is foundational for understanding climate dynamics, human comfort, building performance, and risk forecasting. For ESG reporting, precision agriculture, or infrastructure monitoring, accurate and hyperlocal temperature data is essential. Ambios provides real-time and historical Temperature Data collected from over 3,000+ first-party sensors in 20 countries. With high spatial and temporal resolution, our decentralized environmental network delivers reliable temperature insights for various applications.
-3,000+ first-party sensors delivering data every 15 minutes -Coverage across 20 countries and diverse climates -Historical data available -Designed for integration into ESG reports, digital twins, and risk dashboards -Supports smart infrastructure, crop modeling, heat resilience, and HVAC optimization
Use cases include:
-ESG disclosures and climate-related risk tracking -Smart building temperature control and energy savings -Agricultural yield optimization and weather-responsive irrigation -Urban heat island analysis and resilience planning -Scientific research and real-time environmental modeling
Backed by DePIN (Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network) infrastructure, Ambios ensures the data is trustworthy, tamper-proof, and scalable—giving enterprises, cities, and developers the foundation to build intelligent, climate-resilient systems. From field to cloud, Ambios Temperature Data delivers the accuracy, resolution, and transparency needed for today’s environmental and operational demands.
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Ice days per month per weather station from 1981 to 2010.
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TwitterThis statistic displays the average monthly rainfall in Germany over the past 20 years. It shows that over the past twenty years the month with the highest average rainfall has been June, with an average rainfall of **** mm. On average, March has been the driest month.
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The historical monthly degree days are calculated from publicly available station data from the DWD Climate Data Center (CDC). The monthly degree days according to VDI 3807 are the sums of the degree days over a calendar month. The degree days refer to a room temperature of 20 degrees Celsius. Degree days are calculated as the temperature difference between room temperature and the daily mean temperature (degrees Celsius). Only the days are counted when the daily average outside temperature is less than 15 degrees Celsius (heating day).
Further information: https://opendata.dwd.de/climate_environment/CDC/derived_germany/techn/monthly/heating_degreedays /hdd_3807/historical/BESCHREIBUNG_derivgermany_techn_monthly_heating_degreedays_hdd_3807_historical_de.pdf
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TwitterBased on current monthly figures, on average, German climate has gotten a bit warmer. The average temperature for January 2025 was recorded at around 2 degrees Celsius, compared to 1.5 degrees a year before. In the broader context of climate change, average monthly temperatures are indicative of where the national climate is headed and whether attempts to control global warming are successful. Summer and winter Average summer temperature in Germany fluctuated in recent years, generally between 18 to 19 degrees Celsius. The season remains generally warm, and while there may not be as many hot and sunny days as in other parts of Europe, heat waves have occurred. In fact, 2023 saw 11.5 days with a temperature of at least 30 degrees, though this was a decrease compared to the year before. Meanwhile, average winter temperatures also fluctuated, but were higher in recent years, rising over four degrees on average in 2024. Figures remained in the above zero range since 2011. Numbers therefore suggest that German winters are becoming warmer, even if individual regions experiencing colder sub-zero snaps or even more snowfall may disagree. Rain, rain, go away Average monthly precipitation varied depending on the season, though sometimes figures from different times of the year were comparable. In 2024, the average monthly precipitation was highest in May and September, although rainfalls might increase in October and November with the beginning of the cold season. In the past, torrential rains have led to catastrophic flooding in Germany, with one of the most devastating being the flood of July 2021. Germany is not immune to the weather changing between two extremes, e.g. very warm spring months mostly without rain, when rain might be wished for, and then increased precipitation in other months where dry weather might be better, for example during planting and harvest seasons. Climate change remains on the agenda in all its far-reaching ways.