The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: The Threshold at Which Snow Starts Irreversibly Disappearing
Dear Diary. This week will be the climatological coldest week across the Northern Hemisphere for most locations. Most places that traditionally see snow during winter will have already seen many inches of the white stuff, yet a snow drought continues for many across the Northeast. As far as my hometown of Atlanta goes, we rarely see snow, but a few inches were counted on falling per year usually due to one or two events prior to 2018. After that year we started to have a snow drought, as well, after a system brought as much as a foot in northern suburbs in December 2017. A snow drought will finally be coming to an end for some locations this Monday:
In addition to dangerous wind chills extending from the Northwest through much of the central U.S., an advancing arctic airmass will continue to support heavy lake effect snows downwind of the Great Lakes through midweek and snow squalls over the Northeast today. pic.twitter.com/PZwfhtGhyF
— NWS Weather Prediction Center (@NWSWPC) January 14, 2024
Back in the decade of the 2000s as climate change was beginning to ramp up, many locations across the Northeast were experiencing snow droughts, so a few climate scientists that I knew were speculating that ski operators would go out of business country wide at the time. This probably was due to the fact that most northern winters that decade were influenced by what is called the positive phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation Usually, these lead to mild winters across the United States. Throw in climate change and winters become quite mild. Of course, these predictions proved false as snow returned in force during colder winters during the 2010s, which were influenced by negative phases of the North Atlantic Oscillation.
The main question I am positing today is at what point does snow totally disappear from most locations and our globe in general? Atlanta would be a good canary in the coal mine for southern areas of the United States. Of course, the further north one goes from Atlanta, the longer in time going through the 21st century it will take for snow to disappear off the calendar. But can we point to very specific global average temperatures to answer this question scientifically? In the following Atlantic article, perhaps we can:
When Does Snow Start Irreversibly Disappearing? – The Atlantic
The Threshold at Which Snow Starts Irreversibly Disappearing
If you think it’s bad now, strap in.
JANUARY 10, 2024
Produced by ElevenLabs and NOA, News Over Audio, using AI narration.
In January 1995, when The Atlantic published “In Praise of Snow,” Cullen Murphy’s opus to frozen precipitation, snow was still a mysterious substance, coming and going enigmatically, confounding forecasters’ attempts to make long-term predictions. Climate change registered to snow hydrologists as a future problem, but for the most part their job remained squarely hydrology: working out the ticktock of a highly variable yet presumably coherent water cycle. “We still don’t know many fundamental things about snow,” Murphy wrote. “Nor do we understand its relation to weather and to climate—the dynamics of climate being one of the perennials on the ‘must figure out’ list of science.”
In January 2024, at long last, someone has figured out a formula of sorts for how snow reacts to climate change, and the answer is: It reacts nonlinearly. Which is to say, if we think snow is getting scarce now, we ought to buckle up.
Nonlinear relationships indicate accelerated change; shifts are small for a while but then, past a certain threshold, escalate quickly. In a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature, two Dartmouth researchers report finding a distinctly nonlinear relationship between increasing winter temperatures and declining snowpacks. And they identify a “snow loss cliff”—an average winter-temperature threshold below which snowpack is largely unaffected, but above which things begin to change fast.
That threshold is 17 degrees Fahrenheit. Remarkably, 80 percent of the Northern Hemisphere’s snowpack exists in far-northern, high-altitude places that, for now, on average, stay colder than that. There, the snowpack seems to be healthy and stable, or even increasing. But as a general rule, when the average winter temperature exceeds 17 degrees (–8 degrees Celsius), snowpack loss begins, and accelerates dramatically with each additional degree of warming.
Already, millions of people who rely on the snowpack for water live in places that have crossed that threshold and will only get hotter. “A degree beyond that might take away 5 to 10 percent of the snowpack, then the next degree might cut away 10 to 15 percent, then 15 to 20 percent,” Alexander Gottlieb, the first author on the paper, told me over the phone as I looked out my window in New York City, where it has rained several times over the past few days. “Once you get around the freezing point”—32 degrees Fahrenheit—“you can lose almost half of your snow from just an additional degree of warming,” he said. New York City, which was recently reclassified as a “humid subtropical” climate, has clocked nearly 700 consecutive days with less than an inch of snowfall. It’s definitely over the snow-loss cliff, and as global temperatures increase, more places will follow.
Read: Snowless winters are already here
Gottlieb and his co-author, Justin Mankin, figured this out by looking at how changes in temperature and precipitation drove changes in snowpack in 169 river basins across the Northern Hemisphere from 1981 through 2020. Using machine learning, they found a clear signal that human-induced climate change was indeed forcing changes in the snowpack in the places where most people live. The sharpest declines were in the watersheds of the southwestern and northeastern United States, and in Central and Eastern Europe. “In places where we are able to identify this really clear signal that climate change has reduced spring snowpack, we expect that to really only accelerate in the near term,” he said.“ Those are places where the train has already kind of left the station.” Indeed, the Hudson River watershed, in which New York City sits, experienced among the steepest declines over that period. In the Northeast, which is not as reliant on spring snowmelt for water, that loss is felt most keenly as a loss of recreation; whole economies in the Northeast are based on skiing.
In the Mountain West, the stakes are even higher. Hydrologists already worry about the future reliability of the region’s snow-fed water supply: Previous research found snowless winters in the Mountain West are likely to be a regular occurrence by mid-century. But crucially, Gottlieb doesn’t see any room for cheerfulness about individual years with off-the-charts snowfall, such as last year’s record snowpack in the Colorado River basin. “This work really shows that we can definitely still get these one-off anomaly years that are incredibly wet, incredibly snowy, but the long-term signal is incredibly clear,” he said. Once you’re over the cliff, there’s no going back. The snow will keep disappearing.
Benjamin Hatchett, an Earth-systems scientist at the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere at Colorado State University, who was not involved with the research, told me that the paper “adds to the story in a very substantive way.” He works in the Sierra Nevada mountains in California, which is “right on that precipice,” he said. The paper is a clear signal that “a low-to-effectively-no-snow scenario could happen very, very quickly,” and he hopes that it prompts people in charge of water policy to imagine what might happen if the mountains lose most of their snow in 10 years, or even five, and begin to make real plans accordingly. “With just a little more warming, we might cascade into that scenario faster than we think,” he said.
“We’re in for a bad time,” Brian McInerney, a former senior hydrologist with the National Weather Service Forecast Office in Salt Lake City, Utah, told me over the phone after reading Gottlieb and Mankin’s paper. “Just look at the Great Salt Lake, look at Lake Powell, look at Lake Mead.” All of those water bodies—the last two are crucial reservoirs for the West—have been in dire straits for years.
Utah, where McInerney lives, already leaped over the snow-loss cliff described in the paper and is now in free fall. “It used to be a blanket of white over all the mountainous areas, even the mountain valleys,” he said. But by 2080, barring dramatic action to curb emissions, he expects just a bit of slushy snow to be left at the tops of some of Utah’s highest mountain peaks. McInerney, who is now a hydrologic consultant, held his post at the National Weather Service for 30 years before retiring in 2019. During that time he watched the field of hydrology reshape itself as climate change went from a side conversation to the central piece of his job. Utah gets 95 percent of its water supply from snowpack.
McInerney says he has seen how Utah keeps investing its hopes in one-off big-snow seasons; this paper, he says, makes clear that that’s an impossible strategy. Individual, dramatic storm seasons can’t save Utah’s water supply. And addressing the looming water crisis in another way—changing long-held water rights for irrigation, or addressing climate change more forcefully—would mean plowing through political obstacles that, so far, no one has been able to conquer. “I feel bad for my daughter, and her children, if my daughter has children,” he says. Their lives in Utah will be harder for this and other climate-related reasons, including drought and wildfire. Plus, they’ll lose a form of human joy he’s experienced all his life. “They won’t experience the beauty and the wonderfulness of skiing in the mountains on a cold day, of skiing powder,” he told me.
McInerney becomes wistful when he talks about skiing. He was a ski patroller before he became a hydrologist. “It’s like art, and it’s like music—skiing is just like that,” he said. “If you ski a powder run on a cold winter day, there is something about it. You’re just whooping and hollering, because you have to. It is such a great feeling. We live for this,” he said. “To have that go away is a tough one.”
Zoë Schlanger is a staff writer at The Atlantic.
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
HISTORIC Atlantic/Mediterranean warmth:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
Crazy MINIMUM temperature 24.1C La Graciosa CANARY ISLANDS
Tropical night MADEIRA TMIN 20C first time in January
Today the warmth moved to Europe with 27C at Totana in SPAIN.
Dozens of records are coming. It will be historic.
Stay tuned. https://t.co/lhqHysHYY2
Update: SERIOUS COLD
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
-54F at Chester Montana !
We have to go back to January 1950 to find a lower temperature there.
The station operated from 1900 to 1919 than again from 1942 until today.
Lower temperatures than today were recorded only in 1950 and 1909. https://t.co/n81KbFrQQp
More records in the Americas
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
Yesterday the same 34.2C temperature meant a new national monthly record again in
DOMINICA which is beating records every month multiple times.
34.2C also record at St Laurent ,FRENCH GUIANA.
Since June,records have been falling EVERY SINGLE DAY. https://t.co/mVgco1OGRc
UNBELIEVABLE in CHILE: This day rewrites world climatic history
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
41.9C at Tranque Lautaro at 1300m asl in Atacama Province.
Records are being totally obliterated by insane margins.
This event writes a new page in world climatology as one of the most extreme ever seen. https://t.co/AtR7eGBFs6
Today, 34 stations in China broke or tied the record in mid-January, and two of them broke the January record. Next, cold air will bring widespread rain and snow to China, but from the 17th~19th, China’s northeastern and southeastern will hit January records again! @extremetemps pic.twitter.com/9U3yM5EJ5G
— Jim yang (@yangyubin1998) January 14, 2024
The combination ENSO + and IOD + is keeping almost all tropical islands and coasts with endless record warmth.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
Last records for highest January temperature:
32.5C Cocos Islands (Australian🇦🇺 territory)
36.0C Thiruvananthapuram INDIA🇮🇳 (it had already beaten the December record) https://t.co/bHR2b3eDKJ
More stifling hot nights in AUSTRALIA
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
where records fall every single day.
MIN. Temperature of 33.2C at Meekatharra today is the highest ever recorded in its climatic history.
More heat is forecast with 46/48C in the area of Marble Bar today. https://t.co/RHb3uZE0sH
BANGKOK DID IT AGAIN- Hottest January night in Asia
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
Crazy 28.5C MIN. temperature at Bangkok Klong Thoey
it's the hottest January night in Thai and Asian climatic history and one of the highest ever recorded in January in the whole Northern Hemisphere -highest is in Kenieba,Mali https://t.co/5jmyYUUMZD
Brutal temperatures contrasts in North America
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
From summerly +12.2C in GREENLAND
To exceptional cold in NW America.
Some all time records low fell in CANADA
-42.6C Yoho data since 1965
-40.3C Sparwood (1980)
-27.6C Penticton (1907) pic.twitter.com/T4yP68DbD7
Update: SERIOUS COLD
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 14, 2024
-54F at Chester Montana !
We have to go back to January 1950 to find a lower temperature there.
The station operated from 1900 to 1919 than again from 1942 until today.
Lower temperatures than today were recorded only in 1950 and 1909. https://t.co/n81KbFrQQp
🧵 Exceptionally low temperatures in British Columbia 🇨🇦 today with many records! 🥶
— Thierry Goose (@ThierryGooseBC) January 14, 2024
🌡️-42.6°C Yoho National Park ➡️ all-time record since 1976! [previous: -42.5°C/Dec. 1990]
🌡️-40.3°C Sparwood ➡️ all-time record since 1980!
[previous: -39.8°C/Feb. 1990]#BCstorm (1/6) pic.twitter.com/VllhNo1HkO
Here is more brand-new December and 2023 climatology:
A historic year for our planet's climate…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 14, 2024
Visualization by @NASAHyperwall: https://t.co/TeIm84iss3 pic.twitter.com/hgXcXZJGtd
This is what abrupt global heating looks like on a graph. “But the worst part is that everyone’s acting normal – it’s like we are zombies." #GlobalWarming #ClimateCrisis pic.twitter.com/QfPwyhnVYn
— Peter Dynes (@PGDynes) January 14, 2024
Looking back at temperatures over the last 3 months – find your location…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 14, 2024
🟥 [red] warmer than average
🟦 [blue] colder than average
Data information at https://t.co/Y7TeMNRXTb pic.twitter.com/zlwbqc5KdU
Here is More Climate News from Sunday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
Coldest air of the year this week in much of U.S. but still doesn't negate climate change. I wrote this primer for people who get confused about seasons, #PolarVortex, cold days, or climate change..This one worth a share as science illiteracy kryptonitehttps://t.co/ZlnACIUx0h
— Dr. Marshall Shepherd (@DrShepherd2013) January 14, 2024
Yes, it's very cold over a sliver of North America that accounts for less than 1% of the planet (https://t.co/JxNnbB8L9j).
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) January 14, 2024
Yes, the planet is the hottest it's every been in mid-January (https://t.co/ZyRSUDcTFA). pic.twitter.com/RljNRnmul6
Temperature anomalies by latitude band for every month of 2023…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 14, 2024
[Plot shows zonal-mean surface air temperature anomalies, where latitude = x-axis (not scaled by distance). Note that there is coarse data (e.g., flat line ends) at the poles] pic.twitter.com/DQHRzRP1rk
Next time 🕰️ politician and their lawyers came up with some obscure 1,5°C target and some fig leaf cover up like Photovoltaic Start Ups for the Über rich 🤑 show them this official data.
— Thomas Reis (@peakaustria) January 14, 2024
Global Climate Highlights 2023 – Copernicus: https://t.co/Kh6tyk8SKD
Record Number of… pic.twitter.com/uHz8uKrCp9
UN climate goals are not grounded in sound science, experts warn.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) January 14, 2024
With ill-defined climate targets, countries could claim success on climate change without actually doing what's needed to slash emissions and stem warming.https://t.co/1WjMiaQPXl
The month-to-date temperature departure for the Contiguous U.S. is now 0.4F below the 1991-2020 normal. pic.twitter.com/R3wyniEzC3
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) January 14, 2024
Frankly, every year since @DrJamesEHansen’s 1988 testimony has felt like an exposure of the failure of political will – but now risks are clear. World will look at 2023 as year humanity exposed its inability to tackle climate crisis, scientists say https://t.co/PT6Q22SeL0
— Prof Phoebe Barnard @phoebebarnard.bsky.social (@BarnardPhoebe) January 14, 2024
"Rapid ocean warming could lead to intensification of extreme weather events … "
— Roger Hallam (@RogerHallamCS21) January 15, 2024
Why the word "could"? Why scientists' obsession with total certainty before they use the word "will"? Because this is not science, it is bourgeois repression!https://t.co/F0onHJttRh
Your 'moment of doom' for Jan. 14, 2024~ The real #climatecasino
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) January 14, 2024
"insurance industry has known for at least two decades but continues to plow forward into a dismal future focused only on shareholder value, as if there is no value to a sustainable planet."https://t.co/QkBWgTC3gc
good trouble… https://t.co/p5jCedMWxm
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) January 14, 2024
More from the Weather Department:
Conditions today in Portland, Maine, as record-breaking water levels and storm surge flood the streets. #MEwx pic.twitter.com/yIXnxqV41i
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) January 13, 2024
Vehicles drove through sea foam in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire, after a major storm brought flooding and huge waves to the area last week. pic.twitter.com/P1QlfJBaja
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) January 14, 2024
1-hour from what would have been game time for the Bills-Steelers today and the stadium is on a complete whiteout. Yes, it would have been crazy fun to see this game in these conditions, but postponing was the correct decision. @2024nflplayoffs @NWSBUFFALO pic.twitter.com/WM7z4aqcN9
— Tom Niziol (@TomNiziol) January 14, 2024
The observation from the Kansas City downtown airport (MKC) should be used for the game time temp/wind chill. The temp/wind at game time is -2F/9 mph -> wind chill of -18F. This is behind the Ice Bowl (1967), Freezer Bowl (1982), Vikings (1/10/2016) and Green Bay (1/20/2008).
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) January 14, 2024
The blue, green and yellow NOT moving is the IR satellite picking up the frigid ground temps !! 0F to -40F in fact #sick pic.twitter.com/8KASV7jCUD
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) January 14, 2024
If you're enjoying the Arctic blast this weekend, then I've got great news for you! 🥶
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) January 14, 2024
Another full load of Arctic air will dump on the Eastern US next weekend!
📉🌡
GraphCast experimental A.I. has been nailing this ongoing polar pattern. pic.twitter.com/ExpoDtckJA
Some commenters noted how the coldest temperatures from this cold outbreak skirted around the Rockies.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) January 14, 2024
This is a classic example of "cold air damming" – and is very prominent in Colorado, where it's much colder in lower elevations east of the Rockies than over the mountains! https://t.co/4zGoi0SRTP pic.twitter.com/8wLwOc3vgt
The Lake Erie snow band, very impressive from satellite at sunset!! #weather #winter pic.twitter.com/jYJ5qXNqdm
— Tom Niziol (@TomNiziol) January 14, 2024
A travel ban is in effect for most of Erie County, NY, on Sunday as a major winter storm brings gusty winds and several feet of heavy snow to Western New York. #NYwx pic.twitter.com/OPsuS91u8I
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) January 14, 2024
The Arctic air makes zero progress east in the next 18-hours. It just Sit N Spin over the central U.S.
— Ryan Maue (@RyanMaue) January 14, 2024
No improvement from Montana to Iowa until Tuesday. pic.twitter.com/J1gcknJiG5
The month-to-date temperature departure for the Contiguous U.S. is now 0.4F below the 1991-2020 normal. pic.twitter.com/R3wyniEzC3
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) January 14, 2024
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Oxford becomes UK’s electric bus capital as 159 vehicles join fleet https://t.co/CoYqfEevsp
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) January 14, 2024
Hooray! Ohio's largest solar plant just came online, joining global solar tsunami. The 577 MW giant has three phases: 150 MW Fox Squirrel 1 now online; the 250 MW Fox Squirrel 2 online in mid-2024: and the 177 MW Fox Squirrel 3 online end of 2024.https://t.co/il2x4eXZO3
— John Raymond Hanger (@johnrhanger) January 14, 2024
More on the Environment and Nature:
A system that invests 35 times more in destroying the biosphere than trying to rescue it is certain to collapse. pic.twitter.com/GC4c7SNTZu
— Peter Dynes (@PGDynes) January 14, 2024
50 million people live with dementia, and the figure is expected to rise to 150 million in 26 years.
— Greenpeace International (@Greenpeace) January 14, 2024
An 11-year study in the UK adds to body of research associating #AirPollution with declining brain health. https://t.co/cLoAyU3j3h
From the edge of extinction Spain and Portugal were able to save the world's most endangered cat from the brink.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) January 14, 2024
We have the solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate #climate #energy #nature #rewilding #GreenNewDeal pic.twitter.com/uPSJ39TTgY
Night thoughts
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 14, 2024
Especially in spring, this is essential for the survival of our bees, bumblebees and many other little helpers in nature.💚🐝🌿🌱☘️🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/7CqWnWMpeP
They work so hard – they deserve a little rest
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) January 14, 2024
1 of Every 3 Bites of Food you eat Depends on Bees
We would not survive without them but they are disappearing fast
EU to profit Big Pesticides
approved deadly glyphosate in Round up for another 10 years will wipe out even more Bee https://t.co/M8zNAnfHkH
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
Today is a day that will be remembered by Icelanders for decades to come. Lava flow continues to invade the town of Grindavík this evening, destroying everything in its path.
— Nahel Belgherze (@WxNB_) January 14, 2024
Credit: Árna Sæberg pic.twitter.com/oF8lEmmhYx
good trouble… https://t.co/p5jCedMWxm
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) January 14, 2024