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Temperatures in this region see a range of 8° C to 28° C. [11] The Southern region is drier than the coastline, with an average rainfall around 100mm of rain per year and temperatures ranging from below 0° C to 28° C. [11] The average temperature across Morocco has seen an increase of 0.2°C per decade, but between 1971 and 2017 ...
Agadir became a large city of over half a million by 2004, with a large port with four basins: the commercial port with a draft of 17 metres, triangle fishing, fishing port, and a pleasure boat port with marina. Agadir was the premier sardine port in the world in the 1980s and has a beach stretching over 10 km with fine seafront promenades.
This is a list of countries and sovereign states by temperature.. Average yearly temperature is calculated by averaging the minimum and maximum daily temperatures in the country, averaged for the years 1991 – 2020, from World Bank Group, derived from raw gridded climatologies from the Climatic Research Unit.
The list of weather records includes the most ... Morocco: 50.4 °C (122.7 °F) Agadir ... Greenland on 22 December 1991. [197] Coldest average monthly ...
[107] [108] Morocco’s contribution to global GHGs is very small (about 0.18%) and majority of GHGs come from the energy sector. [107] As of the 2023 Climate Change Performance Index, Morocco was ranked seventh in preparedness for climate change. [109] A dried body of water in Agadir. Climate change will increase the frequency of drought in ...
The period of November through April is mild and rainy with average high temperatures of 17 to 21 °C (63 to 70 °F) and lows of 8 to 12 °C (46 to 53 °F), however temperatures can occasionally drop to around 2 °C (36 °F) in the morning, or be as high as 24 °C (75 °F) for a few days during winter.
Souss-Massa (Arabic: سوس ماسة, romanized: sūs māssa) is one of the twelve regions of Morocco. It covers an area of 51,642 km² and had a population of 2,676,847 as of the 2014 Moroccan census. [1] [2] The capital of the region is Agadir. [3]
Dakhla was occupied by Spain from the late 19th century to 1975, when power was then relinquished to a joint administration between Morocco and Mauritania. [10] There was a United Nations-sponsored ceasefire in 1991, but as recently as 2006, most UN member states have refused to recognise Moroccan sovereignty in the area.