PARIS: From roasting temperatures to rocketing energy prices and millions of refugees fleeing Ukraine, 2022 was a year of extremes.
AFP looks back at some of the records smashed:
Food and energy prices
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February caused a massive jump in energy and food costs, with the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s Food Price Index hitting a historic peak in March and the cost of gas in Europe reaching record highs.
Restoring nature could depend on how countries help farmers
The eurozone annual inflation climbed steadily to 10.6 percent in October, the biggest increase since the index began in 1997. It then slowed in November for the first time in a year and a half.
Refugees
The war also triggered the biggest wave of refugees in Europe since the end of World War II.
Over 100 Rohingya refugees rescued in Sri Lankan waters
More than 7 million Ukrainians fled to other European countries and a further 6.9 million were displaced internally, according to the UN refugee agency UNHCR.
Globally, the number of displaced people exceeded 100 million for the first time.
Burning up
Europe sweated through its hottest summer on record, with records tumbling in many countries, including England where the mercury topped 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first time.
Heat will stay on in Europe this winter, but after?
Forest fires linked to the hotter, drier conditions also scorched more land than ever before in Europe – over 600,000 hectares.
Hail of missiles
North Korea fired a record number of missiles into the Sea of Japan in response to large-scale joint military exercises staged by South Korea and the United States.
Escalating tensions, North Korea fires two ballistic missiles
A particularly intense peak saw 23 missiles fired in 24 hours on November 2.
Farewell Queen
After 70 years on the throne, Britain’s longest-serving monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, passed away on September 8, aged 96.
Christmas will feel very different without Queen Elizabeth, says Britain’s Kate
Before her massive state funeral, an estimated quarter of a million people queued round the clock to view the coffin as it lay in state.
Musk mayhem
It was a big year for Elon Musk, although he ended it being knocked off his perch as the world’s richest man on Forbes’ billionaire list by French businessman Bernard Arnault of global luxury empire LVMH.
Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX added Twitter to his portfolio for $44 billion in October and swiftly caused controversy by firing half the staff and lifting bans of people who had been thrown off the platform, including Donald Trump.
Elon Musk’s vow to hold on to Tesla stock fails to soothe investors
In December Musk said he would resign as chief executive once he found a replacement, in apparent response to a poll he launched that suggested users wanted him to step down.
New artistic heights
The art collection of Microsoft’s co-founder Paul Allen, which included works by Cezanne, Klimt and Van Gogh, was sold by Christie’s for $1.62 billion, the biggest amount ever for an art auction.
Paul Allen’s art collection tops $1bn at Christie’s
Marilyn Monroe was a big hitter too, with one of her photo portraits by Andy Warhol selling for $195 million, making it the most expensive 20th century artwork.
Tennis titans
When Rafael Nadal won the French Open for the 14th time, the Spanish ace raised his own record of Grand Slam titles to 22, ahead of Novak Djokovic (21) and Roger Federer (20).
Djokovic, Nadal to kickstart bid for 2023 supremacy in Australia
It was also a year of farewells with two of the sport’s greatest players calling time on their glittering careers: Federer and Serena Williams, who has 23 Grand Slams to her name.
Jet-setting Swift
The 10th album by the US megastar, “Midnights”, caused such a frenzy that Spotify broke down as more fans sought to listen to it over a single day than any other album.
Ten of its tracks were listed in the top ten Billboard Hot 100, also a first.
Less glorious for Swift was her topping the list for the “worst private jet CO2 emission offenders” among celebrities for her extensive private jet use.
In August when she was awarded the unenviable prize, she had already clocked up 170 flights in her private jet.
Eight billion humans
In November the world’s population – which numbered 2.5 billion in 1950 – exceeded eight billion, according to the UN.