Extreme Temperature Diary- Wednesday March 18th, 2026/Main Topic: Climate Change Drove Record Winter Warmth in the Western U.S.

Climate Change Drove Record Winter Warmth in the Western U.S. | Climate Central

Climate Change Drove Record Winter Warmth in the Western U.S.

KEY FACTS

  • Climate Central’s new global analysis shows where people felt the strongest influence of human-caused climate change on daily average temperatures between December 2025 and February 2026.
  • Every day from December 2025 to February 2026, more than one in six people on the planet experienced temperatures made at least two times more likely by climate change.
  • The U.S. experienced a strong divide. Western states experienced exceptional and record-breaking winter warmth driven by climate change. Eastern states experienced near-average or below-average seasonal temperatures and extreme cold snaps that are less likely to occur in our warming climate. 
  • In 54 U.S. cities, mostly in the western U.S., the average resident experienced at least two weeks’ worth of temperatures made at least two times more likely by climate change. 

This Climate Matters analysis is partly based on open-access data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). See Methodology for details.

Download data

Read the report

Explore interactive maps

Global fingerprints of climate change: December 2025 to February 2026

Heat-trapping pollution (mainly from burning coal, oil, and methane gas) influenced temperatures in nearly all regions of the world during the past three months. 

Every day from December 2025 to February 2026, more than one in six people on the planet experienced temperatures made at least two times more likely by climate change.

That’s according to Climate Central’s latest report, People Exposed to Climate Change: December 2025 to February 2026.

This analysis used Climate Central’s Climate Shift Index (CSI) system to quantify the influence of human-caused climate change on daily average temperatures around the world from December 1, 2025, to February 28, 2026. See Methodology for details.

CSI level 2 (3, 4, etc.) indicates local temperatures that were made at least two (three, four, etc.) times more likely due to climate change. Negative CSI levels indicate local temperatures that were made less likely due to climate change.

Climate change drove exceptional winter warmth in the western U.S.

The western U.S. experienced exceptional warmth this past winter (December 2025 through February 2026). 

  • Nine western states experienced their warmest December-February on record. 
  • According to Climate Central’s analysis, average temperatures over the past three months in Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, and Utah were more than 7°F above normal. Wyoming topped the list at 9.3°F above normal. 
  • This western U.S. warmth stood out globally. Among the 960 global cities analyzed, 13 of the top 15 cities with the highest temperature anomalies were in the western U.S. Casper, WY topped the global list. 

Table 1. Top five U.S. cities with the highest temperature anomalies from December 1, 2025, to February 28, 2026. 

CitySeasonal temperature difference from normal (°F)Days at CSI level 2 or higher
1. Casper, WY13.0°5 days
2. Grand Junction, CO10.1°34 days
3. Bozeman, MT9.7°18 days
4. Denver, CO9.3°17 days
5. Cheyenne, WY8.9°7 days

Human-caused climate change made this exceptionally warm winter in the western U.S. more likely. 

  • The average person living in Hawaii, Arizona, California, Nevada, or New Mexico experienced more than a month’s worth of unusually warm temperatures made at least twice as likely due to climate change. 
  • The average person living in 54 U.S. cities, mostly in the Western U.S., experienced at least two weeks’ worth of temperatures made at least two times more likely by climate change.
  • Outside the contiguous U.S., San Juan, Puerto Rico and Honolulu top the list with the average resident experiencing 82 and 59 such days. 

Table 2. Top five U.S. cities with the most total days at CSI 2 or higher from December 1, 2025, to February 28, 2026.

CityDays at CSI level 2 or higherSeasonal temperature difference from normal (°F) 
1. San Juan, Puerto Rico82 days1.1°
2. Honolulu, HI59 days
3. Prescott, AZ51 days
4. Santa Maria, CA49 days3.8°
5. Phoenix, AZ48 days4.9°

This unusual western winter warmth can have year-round consequences. For example, the current record-low snowpack in Oregon, Colorado, and Utah threatens western water supplies. Warmer, low-snow winters mean smaller snow reserves that melt earlier yet need to stretch longer  to meet the region’s water demands. Snow drought can also lead to drier forests and grasslands that can fuel more intense wildfires. 

Climate change made the cold winter in the eastern U.S. less likely

Much of the eastern U.S. experienced below-average temperatures this past winter. Although no states had a record-cold winter, December-February temperatures in 21 eastern states were at least 1°F below normal.

Although seasonal average temperatures were not exceptionally colder than normal, several disruptive and dangerous extreme cold events affected the eastern U.S. this winter. 

Mid-December 2025 Midwestern cold period: less likely in a warming world

  • During a mid-December cold period in the Midwest, 62 U.S. cities (for example: Detroit) experienced temperatures at least twice as unlikely to occur (CSI level -2 or below) because of climate change.

January 2026 cold snap in the east: less likely in a warming world 

  • According to the CSI, the late January 2026 cold snap that gripped much of the eastern half of the country was made less likely to occur in many areas because of human-caused climate change. 
  • This effect was most widely felt on January 25 when temperatures across 34 eastern U.S. cities (for example: Syracuse, NY) averaged 22.6°F below normal and were at least two times less likely to occur due to heat-trapping pollution.

February 2026 blizzard: no climate change influence on temperatures

  • A historic blizzard brought heavy snow, high winds, and below-normal temperatures to the Northeast in late February. CSI data indicates that human-caused climate change had no detectable influence on temperatures in the Northeast during the core of this event. 

In a world warmed by heat-trapping pollution, these types of cold snaps still happen. But CSI data shows that climate change is making them less likely to occur now and in the future. 

LOCAL STORY ANGLES

Is climate change influencing daily temperatures in your local area?

Climate Central’s Climate Shift Index (CSI) system provides tools, data, custom maps, and local alerts to answer this question in real-time. Here are three ways to use the CSI:

  • Use the CSI map tool to see which parts of the world are experiencing high CSI levels today, tomorrow, and any day in the recent past.
  • Access the CSI in KML format to bring this high-resolution data into your on-air broadcasts.
  • Sign up for alerts to receive custom emails when strong CSI levels are detected in your local area.

CONTACT EXPERTS

To request an interview with a Climate Central expert about this analysis, please contact Abbie Veitch, aveitch@climatecentral.org.

METHODOLOGY

All Climate Shift Index (CSI) levels reported in this brief are based on daily average temperatures and ECMWF ERA5 data from December 1, 2025, to February 28, 2026. See the frequently asked questions for details on computing the Climate Shift Index, including a summary of the multi-model approach described in Gilford et al. (2022).

For the set of local graphics included in this release, daily average temperature anomalies (relative to 1991-2020 normals) from December 1, 2025, to February 28, 2026 were obtained from the Applied Climate Information System (ACIS), which is developed, maintained, and operated by NOAA’s Regional Climate Centers. Three locations were missing data for at least half of the days analyzed and do not have local graphics: Chico, CA; Palm Springs, CA; and Bend, OR.

Values shown in maps and tables across this website have been rounded for clarity. For exact values, please download the full dataset.

A detailed methodology can be found in the full report.

Well, the ridiculous mid-March heat has officially arrived in the Western U.S., with quite a few locations in California already reaching/breaking all-time monthly records today. Believe it or not, the heat will further intensify and become even more widespread later this week.

Daniel Swain (@weatherwest.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T23:30:35.542Z

Yesterday was historic! 📈 New all-time March records were set in Redwood City (93°F!) and Oakland Museum (89°F), while SFO and Salinas tied their monthly highs. The heat continues today, March 18. We're watching records in Kentfield (89°F)… https://x.com/NWSBayArea/status/2034299442103280029

NWS Bay Area Bot (@nwsbayareabot.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T16:11:37.274156Z

In Phoenix, Arizona, temperatures could reach an unbelievable 107°F (+42°C) on Friday. If that verifies, it would break the record for the earliest occurrence of 107°F since records began in 1895, pulverising the previous record by a whopping 44 days.This is totally bonkers.

Nahel Belgherze (@wxnb.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T16:26:20.465Z

🥵 Astonishing heat in the West this week as arguably the most abnormal #heatwave we’ve encountered in the Spring historical record breaks monthly March records by leaps and bounds! Take a look at the forecast max temps this week vs the current March records (bottom). Breaking by remarkable margins!

Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T13:06:44.800Z

Paul Ehrlich's basic message–that humanity has been on an unsustainable path–has proven disturbingly prescient given the latest evidence.We can thank for that the very people & institutions who are now smearing him on his passing.www.science.org/doi/10.1126/…

Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T23:23:04.540Z

More heat is expected across CA. A large, persistent ridge of high pressure has settled above the western U.S., writes @jackjlee.bsky.social“This is a summerlike ridge occurring in March,” said @weatherwest.bsky.social “It’s really genuinely shocking.”www.sfchronicle.com/weather/arti…

Pam Kan-Rice (@ucanrpam.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T16:21:03.920Z

Here they obsess over the hockey stick (h/t @ziyatong.bsky.social).(1) The cited critique is McShane & WYNER (2) It's been thoroughly refuted: www.realclimate.org/index.php/ar…(3) It doesn't even purport to address the independent confirmation & extension of the "hockey stick" in IPCC AR6

Michael E. Mann (@michaelemann.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T17:18:06.728Z

How realistic is the #climate science in the new Sci-Fi film #ProjectHailMary starring Ryan Gosling? Using climate simulations, PIK researcher Levke Caesar (Planetary Boundaries Science Lab) highlights the enormous risks of playing with greenhouse gases. www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJso…

PIK_climate (@pik-potsdam.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T15:55:16.510Z

US Blizzards, Polar Vortex, Heat Domes, Atmospheric Rivers – Weather Weirding, Weather Wilding and Weather Whiplashing…https://youtu.be/hKIM1RRuH8o?si=ukUdkSJ5S1vElxsQ #weather #weatherphotography #forecasting #meteorology #climate #Arctic #poles #climatechange

Paul Beckwith (@paulhbeckwith.bsky.social) 2026-03-16T23:22:26.045Z

Au revoir coastal #nuclearwww.nature.com/articles/s41…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T10:52:53.502Z

Reporting on #AI and #climate? Want to, but don't know where to begin? Our recent press briefing dives into the climate and community implications of the recent surge in construction of AI data centers: buff.ly/XtlCMnv

Covering Climate Now (@coveringclimatenow.org) 2026-03-18T12:31:36.867Z

Imagine a #Levy where fossil fuel companies exporting and profiting from the making #climate disasters worse, have to pay towards recovery and resilience building costs. It would make all our lives better, and make the polluters pay for the harm they cause.#auspolthepoint.com.au/opinions/260…

LouiseMorris (@louisemorris.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T04:37:14.519Z

AustralianSuper – the biggest shareholder in Whitehaven Coal, owning nearly $1 billion in shares – doesn't seem too keen on accepting this gift… 🤔If you don't want new coal #AustralianSuper: make sure you tell Whitehaven! #climate #auspol

Market Forces (@marketforces.org.au) 2026-03-18T02:40:07.042Z

Saskatchewan student explores overlap between industry and Indigenous land restoration concepts and talks climate in community. @katharinehayhoe.com @climatedesk.org www.nationalobserver.com/2026/03/16/o…

Patty Lane (@pattylane.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T21:27:51.550Z

An extreme early-season heat wave could see temperatures 20-30 degrees above average and record temperatures broken by 10 or more degrees today and tomorrow across the Desert Southwest. Jumping right into summer-like heat puts vulnerable populations at risk. Stay cool at www.weather.gov/safety/heat

National Weather Service (@nws.noaa.gov) 2026-03-18T16:23:36.509Z

Is he crying because it’s gonna be so cold tomorrow morning? Or because he realizes it’s the last cold morning until next December?? Perhaps we’ll never know. #Florida problems!

Jeff Berardelli (@weatherprof.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T22:58:14.741Z

A dusty "medicane" swirling over the Mediterranean Sea.

Dakota Smith (@weatherdak.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T21:21:21.882Z

Our atmosphere is powerful, complex, and sometimes just straight up…. freaky. Open and closed cell stratocumulus oscillate as ships cut through them forming tracks in the clouds.

Dakota Smith (@weatherdak.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T15:57:29.358Z

China move to “mass production” of sodium batteries for both transport and large-scale energy storage as alternative to lithium.www.reuters.com/sustainabili…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T10:05:10.656Z

This Tesla deal was touted by Trump's Department of Interior as part of its American “Big Beautiful Coal” Power Resurgence initiative: www.doi.gov/trump-admini… #climate

Lora Kolodny (@lorak.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T22:19:40.914Z

What you need to know about #AI and #energy …www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T13:56:23.801Z

And there's the rub.The gov wants to push through the insane fossil fuel gas infra because it'll resuce Trump's trade deficit vanity metric.Selling Ireland & its children down the flooded #climate river to appease a madman.(via @newschambers.bsky.social on Instagram) #IrishPol

Daryl Feehely (@darylfeehely.com) 2026-03-17T20:22:49.121Z

Nuclear #fusion – for the last 70 years, always just about to deliver.Perhaps an experiment to prove that time doesn'texist in #nuclear physics ?www.ft.com/content/b21a… via @ft

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T09:44:06.112Z

UK's #nuclear research body consults on plans to cut about 200 jobsMove by UKNNL leads union to question government claims about 'golden age' for sector.www.ft.com/content/fe8a…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T09:51:47.223Z

“The science itself doesn't lead us toward a sense of doom and despair. The science tells us that if we stop putting carbon pollution into the atmosphere, the warming of the planet actually stops very quickly.” @michaelemann.bsky.social on the Horizon Podcast with host @pennsasdean.bsky.social

Mann Research Group (@mannresearch.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T21:40:33.444Z

How ignorance, misunderstanding and obfuscation ended #Iran #nuclear talksNegotiators had reached agreement on key issues despite Trump team’s idiosyncratic approach. Two days later, war beganwww.theguardian.com/world/2026/m…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T10:20:38.569Z

Iran’s #nuclear materials and equipment remain a danger in an active war zone theconversation.com/irans-nuclea…

Dr Paul Dorfman (@drpauldorfman.bsky.social) 2026-03-18T09:39:53.351Z

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