The UK has recorded an annual average temperature of more than 10C for the first time last year, the Met Office said, as it confirmed 2022 was the country's hottest year on record.
Research by Met Office scientists has also found that climate change driven by humans made the UK's record-breaking annual temperature around 160 times more likely to occur.
The full temperature data for 2022 shows that the country saw a provisional annual average temperature of 10.03C, the highest in records dating back to 1884 and 0.15C higher than the previous record of 9.88C set in 2014.
The warm conditions would have been expected once in 500 years under a natural climate, without humans warming the planet through activities such as burning fossil fuels, but is now likely every three to four years in the current climate, the experts said.
Met Office climate attribution scientist, Dr Nikos Christidis, said: "To assess the impact of human-induced climate change on the record-breaking year of 2022, we used climate models to compare the likelihood of a UK mean temperature of 10C in both the current climate and with historical human climate influences removed.
"The results showed that recording 10C in a natural climate would occur around once every 500 years, whereas in our current climate it could be as frequently as once every three to four years."
He also said that by the end of the century with medium levels of greenhouse gas emissions, a UK average temperature of 10C could occur almost every year.
Since records began in 1884, the ten warmest years in the UK have occurred from 2003, the Met Office said, confirming trends reported elsewhere in Europe this winter.
The Met Office report was released ahead of a broader study on 10 January by Copernicus, the European Union's planetary observation programme, into EU and global weather patterns last year.
Earth has warmed more than 1.1C since the late 19th century, with roughly half of that increase occurring in the past 30 years, the World Meteorological Organization said in a report in November.