The start of 2019 has been marked by extreme weather across the world, sparking concerns that climate change could be accelerating.

Using our map you can see these events play out in close to real time. The map shows satellite images from the last 24 hours, so you can see pictures from the polar vortex hitting the Midwest in the United States, to wildfires devastating Tasmania.

Can the world still be getting warmer when people are dying from cold in the US?

January was Australia’s hottest month on record. The temperatures were so high halted play was temporarily halted at the Australian open tennis tournament and caused hundreds of thousands of fish to die in the rivers of New South Wales.

Meanwhile, almost 200,000 hectares of land in Tasmania has been burnt out over the last six weeks, as state officials have battled an unprecedented bushfire crisis.

CO2 emissions from fires in Tasmania in January 2019 already surpass total emissions from all years going back to 2003, according to an analysis by Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service implemented by European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts.

While temperatures soared in the southern hemisphere, they plummeted in the United States. Chicago was colder than the Arctic last week, prompting this tweet from Donald Trump.

 He’s right, it’s cold, not warm and global warming is a phrase that has warm in it. So what’s going on? Are these strange weather events isolated incidents or the sign of a broader trend?

You might have read about the polar vortex in recent days. The polar vortex is a strong band of cold air that ensures that the extreme cold temperatures in the North Pole stay locked in the Arctic region. The Guardian has a detailed explanation of it here.