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 extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: U.S. December and 2023 Record Scoreboard and Climatological Review
Dear Diary. It’s time once again for our monthly climatological review. Here on this site, we usually present monthly summaries near the 8th of each month, and each is available by clicking the link below:
https://guyonclimate.com/category/record-scoreboard-climatological-reviews/
I’m repeating this mantra every month:
Some people ask me, why track record temperatures? More heat does not affect me, so why should I care? Because record warmth is a big symptom of the climate's health over the last few decades, giving us warning of what may come. Heed the drip drip drip coming into the Titanic. pic.twitter.com/8X958Y1cj2
— Guy Walton (@climateguyw) February 3, 2020
I have a red alert!
As anticipated. December 2023 by far was the most anomalously warm December on record and by a great amount.
December 2023 using 1901-2000 mean data got ranked by the National Center for Environmental Information for the lower 48 states as warmest, or 129th coolest since records began being kept in 1895….a whopping 7.29°F(4.05°C) above average.
2023 using 1901-2000 mean data got ranked by the National Center for Environmental Information for the lower 48 states as 5th warmest, or 125th coolest since records began being kept in 1895.
The above data was from:
https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/national/rankings
JUST IN
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
December 2023 in the USA was exceptional:
With an average temperature of 39.97F and an anomaly of +5.63F it was by far the WARMEST DECEMBER ON RECORD
2023 as a whole had an average temperature of 54.43F,an anomaly of +1.15F and ranked 5th warmest year.
Chart by NOAA pic.twitter.com/21baAYgNx4
Overall, during December we saw most reports of record warmth coming from every corner of the nation except for the Southeast during the month. The few reports of record chill came from stations with low periods of record scattered about the nation. No one state saw below average temperatures. Montana and all of the northern Plains states saw a record warm December:
Here are some eyepopping special statistics for December 2023 minus record tallies from Alaska::
- With only 51 reports during December 2023, the U.S. had the lowest number of DLMN records since October 1921 (when there were far fewer eligible reporting stations).
- With only 43 reports during December 2023, the U.S. had the lowest number of DLMX records since October 1921.
- The ratio of DHMX to DLMN records for December 2023 was approximately 83.9 to 1 of for the United States and was the highest such ratio since March 1910, which had a ratio of 74.5 to 1 with very few reports during that month from 114 years ago.
- The ratio of DHMN to DLMX records for December 2023 was approximately 127.2 to 1, the highest in my entire database starting in January 1890.
You can check these out for yourself on my NCEI record archive, which I will be updating later this month with the latest numbers:
NCEI Record Count Archive – Guy On Climate
Here are my two U.S. Daily Record Scoreboards updated through 1/08/2024 (data compiled from the following NCEI site):
https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cdo-web/datatools/records
I’m also keeping tabs on record report totals to verify a scientific study I helped to complete in the decade of the 2000s. We’ll eventually see how skewed ratios of record warm to cold reports get by the year 2100, which the study mentions as 50-1 for DHMX vs. DLMN:
DHMX= Daily High Max Reports. DLMN= Daily Low Min Reports. DHMN= Daily High Min Reports. DLMX=Daily Low Max Reports.
Totals are record reports for the entire United States including all territories minus those from Alaska. I’ve subtracted those from Alaska to get a better representation of what has occurred across the lower 48 states in association with lower 48 state rankings.
Bold red, blue, or purple colored months, such as December 2023 and June 2021, that have ratios of >10 to 1 daily warm low records or <1 to 10 daily warm to low records are either historically hot or cold, most of which have made news. NCEI rankings are for the lower 48 states with the warmest ranking since 1895 of average temperatures being 128 (for ties) or 129 and 1 being the coldest as of 2023. Blue colors represent cold months and red warm. Those months and years with counts close to a 1 to 1 ratio of highs to lows are colored black. All-time record hottest or coldest months and years are boldly colored in purple. NCDC rankings have been color coded (under tabs in each file) such that values of 54 to 74 are black representing neutral months or years (+ or – 10 from the average ranking of 64).
Record numbers statistically matched up well during December of 2023 with that month being the warmest December on record.
December 2023 had approximately a 82.5 to 1 ratio of record DHMX to DLMN individual record counts, from the warmest December on record, so the color I used for this month was Dark Purple on the top chart.
December 2023 had approximately a 127.2 to 1 ratio of record DHMN to DLMX individual record counts, from the warmest December on record, so the color I used for this month was bold purple on the bottom chart.
Due to climate change, we are seeing fewer blue colors on these Record Scoreboards with time.
As stated, the average temperature lower 48 state ranking for December 2023 was 129, which was colored purple since it was the warmest such ranking.
I color rankings of +10 to -10 from the average ranking for the lower 48 states of 64.5 black, indicating that these are near average temperature wise. The top warmest ranking for 2023 would be 129 since rankings began in 1895.
We are seeing that January 2024 has gotten off to a mild start, but meteorological models forecast well below average temperatures going well into January, so I expect that we will see a much differently ranked month to start off the year 2024 than we saw in December 2023.
After a relatively cool start to the year, 2023 had record ratios near those of the first three years of this decade:
Here is much more detailed climatology for December and the year 2023 as complied by NOAA:
Assessing the U.S. Climate in 2023
A historic year of U.S. billion-dollar weather and climate disasters; 2023 was the fifth-warmest year on record for the contiguous U.S.
PUBLISHED JANUARY 9, 2024
Related Links
Annual 2023 U.S. Climate Report
National Temperature and Precipitation Maps
Climatological Rankings Explained
State of the Climate Summaries
Key Points:
- There were 28 separate billion-dollar weather and climate disaster events identified during 2023—the highest annual disaster count in the 44-year record.
- The average annual temperature of the contiguous U.S. was 54.4°F, which is 2.4°F above average and ranking fifth warmest on record.
- Annual precipitation for the contiguous U.S. was 29.46 inches, 0.48 inch below average, ranking in the driest third of the historical record.
- The Atlantic basin saw 20 named tropical cyclones during 2023—ranking fourth for the most named tropical systems in a year since 1950.
- The preliminary tornado count for 2023 was above average with 1,197 tornadoes reported and an additional 97 preliminary tornadoes still under verification for the October 1 to December 31 period.
- A wildfire broke out on the island of Maui on August 8, becoming the deadliest wildfire in the U.S. in over a century.
- Drought coverage across the contiguous U.S. ranged from a maximum extent of 46 percent occurring on January 3 and a minimum coverage of 19 percent on May 30—the lowest contiguous U.S. footprint since the drought of mid-2020.
- Flash drought impacted much of the Lower Mississippi Valley during the latter half of 2023, resulting in the greatest coverage of exceptional drought in Louisiana—74.2 percent of the state—on November 14.
Other Highlights:
Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters
In 2023, the U.S. experienced 28 weather and climate disasters each incurring losses that exceeded $1 billion. 2023 surpassed 2020, with 22 events, for the highest number of billion-dollar disasters in a calendar year. These disasters included: 17 severe storms, four flooding events, two tropical cyclones, two tornado outbreaks, one winter storm, one wildfire and one drought and heat wave event.
The U.S. disaster costs for 2023 was $92.9 billion. This total annual cost may rise by several billion as additional costs from identified events are reported. There were at least 492 fatalities associated with these events. The costliest events in 2023 were:
- The Southern/Midwestern drought and heat wave that occurred during Spring to Fall of 2023. The total cost of this disaster was $14.5 billion.
- The Southern and Eastern severe weather event that occurred in early March had a cost of $6.0 billion.
Over the last seven years (2017–2023), 137 separate billion-dollar disasters have killed at least 5,500 people and cost greater than $1 trillion in damage.
This is also a record 13th consecutive year where the U.S. experienced 10 or more billion-dollar disasters and the fourth consecutive year (2020–2023) where 18 or more billion-dollar disasters impacted the U.S.
Since records began in 1980, the U.S. has sustained 376 separate weather and climate disasters where overall damages/costs reached or exceeded $1 billion (based on the CPI adjustment to 2023) per event. The total cost of these 376 events exceeds $2.660 trillion.
Temperature
For the year, temperatures were above average across most of the contiguous U.S., with near- to below-average temperatures from parts of the central Rockies to California. Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Hampshire and Massachusetts each ranked warmest while Maine, Vermont, Connecticut, Maryland, Virginia and Florida each ranked second warmest in the 129-year record. An additional 24 states experienced a top-10 warmest January–December on record.
The Alaska January–December temperature was 28.4°F, 2.4°F above the long-term average, ranking 17th warmest in the 99-year record for the state. Much of the state was above normal for the 12-month period while temperatures were near average across parts of southern, western and interior parts of the state.
Precipitation
Precipitation was above average across much of the Northeast, from parts of the western Plains to California, as well as in parts of the Great Lakes, southern Plains, Mississippi Valley and Southeast. Precipitation was below average from parts of the Southwest to the Gulf of Mexico, parts of the Northwest, the Ohio Valley to Mid-Atlantic and much of the Mississippi Valley. Louisiana had the eighth-driest January–December on record. Conversely, Maine ranked fifth wettest, while Vermont and Connecticut each ranked sixth wettest on record for this 12-month period. Three additional states ranked among their top-10 wettest for this year-to-date period.
January–December 2023 ranked fifth wettest on record for Alaska, with above-average precipitation observed across most of the state. Near-normal precipitation was observed in parts of the Southwest, while parts of the Aleutians experienced below-average precipitation during this period.
Tropical Cyclones
Record-warm sea surface temperatures in the Atlantic basin brought 20 named tropical systems during 2023, ranking fourth for the most named storms in a year since 1950. Seven of these storms were hurricanes, including three that intensified to major hurricanes, while three of these storms made landfall in the U.S.—Hurricane Idalia and tropical storms Harold and Ophelia.
Several notable storms brought destruction and flooding to portions of the U.S. and its territories during the months of August and September:
- On August 8, winds from Hurricane Dora exacerbated a wildfire on the island of Maui, Hawaii, making it the deadliest wildfire in the U.S. in over a century.
- On August 18, the first-ever tropical storm watch was issued for southern California as remnants of Hurricane Hilary brought record-breaking rainfall and flooding to parts of the Southwest.
- On August 22, Tropical Storm Harold brought strong winds and heavy rains to parts of the southern Plains.
- On August 30, Hurricane Idalia made landfall in the Big Bend region of Florida as a Category 3 hurricane. This is the strongest hurricane to hit the region in more than 125 years.
- Hurricane Lee brought catastrophic flash flooding and damage to portions of New England before it made landfall just across the border in Canada.
- On September 23, Tropical Storm Ophelia made landfall in eastern North Carolina and moved north along the East Coast. Ophelia brought heavy rain and flooding from North Carolina to Massachusetts, resulting in significant damage and power outages.
Tornadoes
The 2023 tornado count was above the annual 1991–2020 annual average across the contiguous U.S. with 1,197 confirmed tornadoes reported, with an additional 97 preliminary tornadoes still under verification during the October 1 to December 31 period.
- On January 2–4, a tornado outbreak occurred across portions of the southern Plains, Southeast and Illinois. A total of 61 tornadoes was confirmed by the National Weather Service. The tornadoes and severe thunderstorms with hail caused significant damage to the region. Nine of these confirmed tornadoes occurred in Illinois on January 3—the highest number of tornadoes in January for the state since 1989.
- On January 16, two tornadoes were confirmed by the National Weather Service in Iowa—the state’s first January tornadoes since 1967.
- On February 26–27, a tornado outbreak occurred across portions of the South and Midwest. A total of 27 tornadoes, including three EF-2 tornadoes, was confirmed by the National Weather Service. The tornadoes caused damage to portions of Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. A total of 11 of these confirmed tornadoes occurred in Oklahoma on February 26—the highest number of tornadoes in February for the state since records began in 1950.
- An EF-1 tornado touched down on March 22 in the Los Angeles area, becoming the strongest tornado to hit the area since
- On March 24–26, a tornado outbreak occurred across portions of the Southeast and caused catastrophic damage in Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia. A total of 41 tornadoes, including an EF-4 and three EF-3s, was confirmed by the National Weather Service.
- On March 31, nearly 28 million people were under tornado watches as a widespread and deadly tornado outbreak occurred across portions of the Midwest and southern U.S. More than 110 tornadoes, including an EF-4 and eight EF-3s, were confirmed by the National Weather Service—the largest outbreak in a 24-hour period for the month of March.
- On April 1, a 700-yard-wide EF-3 tornado touched down in Delaware, becoming the widest tornado in the state’s history and tying as its strongest.
- On April 30, a state of emergency was declared after a rare EF-3 tornado touched down in Virginia Beach, destroying more than 100 structures.
Fires
The number of wildfires in 2023 was close to the 10-year average (2013–2022) with more than 55,500 wildfires reported over the year, while the total acres burned from these wildfires—2.6 million acres—were well below this 10-year average of 7.1 million acres. In Alaska, nearly 300,000 acres burned during the 2023 fire season—less than half of the state’s seasonal average.
Smoke from Canadian wildfires caused significant air quality issues for millions in portions of the Northeast and Great Lakes this year. On June 7, around 100 million people across 16 states were under air quality alerts while New York City reported the worst air quality of major cities worldwide. On June 27, Chicago reported the worst air quality of any major city in the world as wildfire smoke affected a large portion of the Midwest.
Drought
The year began with the peak coverage of 46.3 percent of the contiguous U.S in drought. Drought coverage shrank as late winter and spring atmospheric rivers and the summer monsoon brought above-normal precipitation to much of the western U.S, recharging some of the major reservoirs that dropped to their lowest levels in 2022. Drought reached a minimum extent of 19 percent on May 30—the smallest contiguous U.S. drought footprint since mid-2020.
Extreme short-term dryness across the Mississippi Valley, combined with persistent dryness across parts of the Plains, reduced streamflow in the Mississippi River to record low water levels for the second year in a row, closing off a vital channel to barge traffic at a crucial time of the year for the transport of crops from the nation’s heartland.
Heat
Several other notable heat events brought record-breaking warmth to portions of the U.S. this year:
- A heat wave caused temperatures to soar well above 100°F across parts of the southern Plains.
- In Texas, the cities of Del Rio and Rio Grande reached 113°F and San Angelo reported 114°F on June 20, setting the all-time heat record at each location. On June 24, the temperature at Rio Grande Village, Texas topped out at 119°F, only 1°F below the all-time temperature record for the state.
- Phoenix, Arizona had an average temperature of 102.8°F for the month of July—the hottest month on record for any major city. Contributing to the record, Phoenix had 31 consecutive days of temperatures above 110°F from June 30 to July 30—breaking the previous record of 18 days set in 1974.
- On July 16, Death Valley soared to 128°F, setting a daily-temperature record, and reported its hottest midnight temperature on record at 120°F on July 17.
- On August 24, temperatures in Chicago soared to 100°F, with a 120°F heat index—this was the first 100°F temperature since July 6, 2012 and the highest ever recorded at Chicago’s official climate observation site.
- Phoenix, Arizona had their all-time warmest summer on record this year, with an average summer temperature of 97.0°F—breaking the previous record of 96.7°F set in 2020.
- Record-high temperatures have persisted across much of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands during the month of September. San Juan reported a monthly average temperature of 85.8°F, making it the hottest month on record. Also, on St. Croix, Rohlsen Airport had their warmest September on record.
Snowfall
A series of nine atmospheric river events from late December 2022 into mid-January 2023 dumped a record amount of rain and mountain snow across parts of the western U.S, hitting California particularly hard causing more than 700 landslides, over 1,400 rescues plus loss of life. By January 26, snow covered nearly 60 percent of the contiguous U.S., while snow cover was below normal from the Plains to the Northeast during January. In February, a rare winter storm dumped heavy snow and record rainfall on portions of Southern California, prompting the National Weather Service to issue the first blizzard warning for the region since 1989.
A winter storm brought heavy snowfall to the Northeast during mid-March. By December 2023, snow cover was below average for most of the contiguous U.S., while portions of the Rockies and central Plains received above-normal snowfall after a blizzard hit the region during the final week of the year. Parts of Alaska observed above-normal snowfall during 2023. More than 39 inches of snow accumulated in Anchorage, Alaska by the end of November, resulting in the snowiest November since record keeping began in 1953—the previous record of 38.8 inches of snow was set in 1994. More than 78 inches had accumulated by the end of the year—with October–December becoming the snowiest water year (October–September) to date in Anchorage.
Climate Extremes Index
The U.S. Climate Extremes Index (USCEI) for 2023 was 65 percent above average and ranked 11th highest in the 114-year record. Elevated warm extremes in both maximum and minimum temperature were observed across portions of the Northeast, Ohio Valley, Upper Midwest, Southeast, South and Northwest. Elevated extremes in the number of days with precipitation, one-day precipitation and wet Palmer Drought Severity Index values were also seen in the Northeast, while the South also experienced elevated extremes in one-day precipitation and dry PDSI values. The West experienced elevated extremes in wet PDSI values. The USCEI is an index that tracks extremes (falling in the upper or lower 10 percent of the record) in temperature, precipitation, drought and landfalling tropical cyclones across the contiguous U.S.
This annual summary from NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information is part of the suite of climate services NOAA provides to government, business, academia and the public to support informed decision-making. For more detailed climate information, check out our comprehensive Annual 2023 U.S. Climate Report scheduled for release on January 12, 2024. For additional information on the statistics provided here, visit the Climate at a Glance and National Maps webpages.
More:
Our summary of today's NOAA report: U.S. billion-dollar weather disasters set an all-time record in 2023, with 28, and a record-warm December closes out the fifth warmest year in more than 120 years of U.S. recordkeeping: https://t.co/NfUisUfQve
— Jeff Masters (@DrJeffMasters) January 9, 2024
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:
Big warming in GREENLAND.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
The temperature at the 3200m asl of the Summit Camp rose to -11.7C (hourly data) which ties its record of highest temperature ever recorded in January.
At sea level temperatures as high as +11.6C at Narsarsuaq. pic.twitter.com/uhJtTUYSUj
This cool season is a real oven in the called ABC islands in the Caribbeans:Aruba,Bonaire and Curacao:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
Yesterday Curacao had another record high TMIN for January with 27.2C while Aruba missed its highest Tmax by 0.2C but next days and nights will becequally hot. pic.twitter.com/cY2QMOCfKd
Another record heat wave in #Brazil:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
Dozens of records for January have been smashed in several states:Sao Paulo,Parana (Londrina),Caera,Alagoas,Sergipe,Mato Grosso..
38.2C Cuiaba tied its monthly record after beating the records of every month since mid 2023.
It's an insanity. https://t.co/mlBNCL2hP2
and yet another record in Curitiba, BRAZIL:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
35.4C hottest January day on record and 2nd hottest day overall in a city with more than 100 years of data.
Hold on: the heat wave has just started …. https://t.co/9I4a1WxyQO
4 days ago, Kvikkjokk-Årrenjarka, #Sweden 🇸🇪 recorded a Tmin of -43.6°C [all-time record since 1877] & a Tmax of -42.3°C [all-time record since 1917 & 4th lowest Tmax ever recorded in Sweden].
— Thierry Goose (@ThierryGooseBC) January 9, 2024
Today, -3.2°C/+6.5°C [at 10 pm!]. Crazy. 🙃
6.8°C in Nikkaluokta [-42.9°C on the 4th] https://t.co/MBTRepccfD pic.twitter.com/8yhxMgNMBX
Here is more brand-new December and 2023 climatology:
🌍🌡️2023 is confirmed as the warmest calendar year on record, with a global average temperature of 14.98°C, 0.60°C above the 1991-2020 level, overtaking 2016, the previous warmest year.
— Copernicus ECMWF (@CopernicusECMWF) January 9, 2024
Learn more in the #C3S Global Climate Highlights report 👉 https://t.co/i7ZDNIrPvj pic.twitter.com/rwSzdfpclP
Just in:2023 HIGHLIGHTS from @CopernicusECMWF
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
Global average temperature was 14.98C
+0.60C vs 1991-2020
+0.17C above the previous record year 2016
From June to December every month was a record
September 2023 was the most anomalous month on record
In Europe it was the 2nd hottest pic.twitter.com/uZv6Ynnjik
With final data coming in a couple of hours,
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
We can anticipate 2023 in USA was the hottest year on records in most of Gulf area between Texas and Florida (including Miami) and also in some Eastern coastal areas, including the hottest year on record in New York City. https://t.co/PqkxVEQpZA
December 2023 in #Italy had a temperature anomaly of +1.87C above normal and was the 3rd warmest on record after 1825 and 2022. (left)
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
2023 as a whole had a temperature anomaly of +1.12C and was the 2nd warmest ,just 0.04C behind 2022. (right)
Maps by ISAC-CNR. pic.twitter.com/5c7gFI9jnS
Double record in #Slovenia:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) January 9, 2024
December 2023 had a temperature anomaly of +2.9C above normal and was the warmest December on record.
This concludes a year 2023 which was the warmest on record.
Map is credit of @meteoSI pic.twitter.com/F26o7z8dYT
Here is More Climate News from Tuesday:
(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.)
🚨 Last year was the hottest in our recorded observations.
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 9, 2024
We know why this is happening. In fact, we've known for decades. We also know that the impacts to people & ecosystems around the world will continue to worsen if the warming continues.
More info https://t.co/cY46RS7lqp pic.twitter.com/IPGqVpjy8C
2023 smashes record for world’s hottest year by huge margin
— Damian Carrington (@dpcarrington) January 9, 2024
– Planet was 1.48C hotter in 2023, finds @CopernicusECMWF
– Rapid cut in fossil fuel burning urgently needed to preserve a liveable climate, say scientists#ClimateCrisis
Story by mehttps://t.co/tmIhZMsCu8
Your 'moment of doom' for Jan. 9, 2024 ~ Massive f&%kery.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) January 9, 2024
"The 2023 Global Climate Highlights report based mainly on the ERA5 reanalysis dataset presents a general summary of 2023's most relevant climate extremes and the main drivers behind them …"https://t.co/G4KZKN5i1C
100 years of December sea surface temperature anomalies ➡️ 2023 is the warmest on record once again (global average).
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) January 9, 2024
Note also the long-term warming signal and patterns of internal climate variability (e.g., El Niño/La Niña). Data from ERSSTv5 at https://t.co/RsgbWgv7OS pic.twitter.com/fsnWxjihXW
Globally, 2023 was the warmest calendar year on record, ahead of 2016: 0.60°C above the already warmed 1991-2020 average, and an estimated 1.48°C above the 1850-1900 average.https://t.co/yHcLUf6pqC pic.twitter.com/kXcszQikWz
— Kees van der Leun (@Sustainable2050) January 9, 2024
Mind Blowing
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) January 9, 2024
2023 confirmed as world's hottest year on record
"What struck me was not just that [2023] was record-breaking, but the amount by which it broke previous records," said @AndrewDessler #ClimateChange #ClimateCrisis #ClimateEmergencyhttps://t.co/Z7t4WjpU4z
The @CopernicusECMWF team announce that 2023 was hottest on record, about 1.48°C above pre-industrial levels.
— Ed Hawkins (@ed_hawkins) January 9, 2024
"2023 was an exceptional year, with climate records tumbling like dominoes," says @OceanTerra
Great graphics in this BBC article about the data: https://t.co/Hfhf7Y9mqp pic.twitter.com/0htILfLkyl
(1 of 6) JUST IN: U.S. struck with historic number of #BillionDollarDisasters in 2023.
— NOAA (@NOAA) January 9, 2024
Last year was the nation’s 5th-warmest year on record.
More from our #Annual 2023 #StateofClimate Report:https://t.co/IgHhdFR4zt@NOAANCEI pic.twitter.com/iTdbndjsDZ
The U.S. was hit with a record 28 billion-dollar weather and climate disasters in 2023. The average time between these devastating events was just 12 days: https://t.co/cK8cFmb2zU #ClimateMatters via @ClimateCentral pic.twitter.com/ykimPu9k56
— Climate Central (@ClimateCentral) January 9, 2024
2023 was an exceptional year with climate records tumbling like dominoes. Not only is 2023 the warmest year on record, it is also the first year with all days over 1°C warmer than the pre-industrial period. @CopernicusECMWF @carlo_tuitter
— Dr Sam Burgess 🌍🌡🛰 (@OceanTerra) January 9, 2024
More: https://t.co/1X7kyvQe0P pic.twitter.com/suTJPH40SJ
Many thanks for your detailed comments and help here.
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) January 9, 2024
It's time to treat the long term problems and not just the symptoms https://t.co/NZpM7k8UXE
Guest post: Climate models underestimate food security risk from ‘compound’ extreme weather | @KKornhuber #CBarchive
— Carbon Brief (@CarbonBrief) January 10, 2024
Read: https://t.co/VixXoivR8p pic.twitter.com/I6EXcRGmc3
"Surviving the Climate Crisis: Lessons from the Earth’s Past" | I'll be speaking about #OurFragileMoment at the @Smithsonian (remote) this Thursday Jan 11.
— Prof Michael E. Mann (@MichaelEMann) January 9, 2024
Register here: https://t.co/axXrxbVvQa pic.twitter.com/KJKT2N4LTu
‘No one wants to be right about this’: #climate scientists’ horror & exasperation as global predictions play out
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) January 8, 2024
"It’s as if the human race has received a terminal medical diagnosis & knows there is a cure, but has consciously decided not to save itself" https://t.co/yGw8NsF5Cd
More from the Weather Department:
#NEW video from @bclemms of the damage in Panama City Beach, FL after a powerful #tornado moved onshore this morning. The damage is widespread through homes and beachfront property #FLwx pic.twitter.com/FSEmktcdSH
— WeatherNation (@WeatherNation) January 9, 2024
(1 of 6) JUST IN: U.S. struck with historic number of #BillionDollarDisasters in 2023.
— NOAA (@NOAA) January 9, 2024
Last year was the nation’s 5th-warmest year on record.
More from our #Annual 2023 #StateofClimate Report:https://t.co/IgHhdFR4zt@NOAANCEI pic.twitter.com/iTdbndjsDZ
Impressive wind gusts today!
— Jesse Ferrell (AccuWeather) (@WeatherMatrix) January 9, 2024
Santa Rosa Beach, FL: 106 mph
Cove Mountain, TN: 94 mph
Starksville, GA: 93 mph
Navarre, FL: 87 mph
Magnolia Beach, FL: 80 mph
(1/3) #flwx pic.twitter.com/SlQvsb8YfB
People commonly associate Atmospheric Rivers (ARs) with the West Coast, but they occur elsewhere as well including the East.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) January 9, 2024
Today’s storm looks like an East Coast AR with the Plains cyclone forcing a deep plume of anomalous poleward moisture transport: pic.twitter.com/Z4Sd9ZJfgt
Impressive radar loop over the last day as the Plains cyclone intensified & grew in size to cover a large swath of the eastern US.
— Tomer Burg (@burgwx) January 9, 2024
Notable aspects include the blizzard conditions in the Plains & intense squall line tracking through the Southeast: pic.twitter.com/amgySnH9Ba
It's also unfortunate that we have had the first confirmed #tornado fatality of 2024. At least one person was killed this morning from the tornado that hit Cottonwood, AL, in the extreme southeast part of the state near Dothan. #ALwx pic.twitter.com/URxcsvIq2u
— Craig Ceecee, Ph.D. (@CC_StormWatch) January 9, 2024
No rest for the weary… another major storm is on tap for the U.S. this week.
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 9, 2024
Winter Storm #Gerri.
Here’s what we know so far⬇️ pic.twitter.com/yJdeXJMojM
My dad's old hometown received some flooding rain on 1/09/2024. Hope that drivers of these gas guzzling SUV's had good insurance. @BrianMcHugh2011 @ProfStrachan @bhensonweather (Covington is located about 40 miles southeast of Atlanta.) https://t.co/qwdzMhcVBU
— Guy Walton (@climateguyw) January 10, 2024
While every inch of road in Iowa is snow covered side streets are the worst like the ones here in Davenport. pic.twitter.com/Ha88hn6Cs2
— Jim Cantore (@JimCantore) January 9, 2024
Frigid Arctic air will begin to spread southward across the heart of the country this weekend and is expected to continue into next week. Much below normal temperatures along with gusty winds will lead to wind chills well below zero for many locations. pic.twitter.com/doT2gkDqoi
— NWS Weather Prediction Center (@NWSWPC) January 9, 2024
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Sub-zero heat pump challenge delivers new tech – and a fresh blow to gas.
— Dr Paul Dorfman (@dorfman_p) January 10, 2024
US Department of Energy’s list of heat pumps that can operate in sub-zero conditions without resorting to gas backup.https://t.co/uTkXllXjHE
A Rapid Transition To Renewable Energy Is Possible. #Uruguay Proved It
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) January 8, 2024
"Uruguay gets over 90% of its electricity from #Renewables"#RenewableEnergy creates wealth and prosperity
"Uruguay has the highest per capita GPD in South America"https://t.co/nufZGM7jWt
In Manhattan, a new waterside park will function as a berm, keeping floodwaters from city streets.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) January 9, 2024
The park is part of a massive, Dutch-inspired flood control project aimed at protecting the city against rising seas.https://t.co/xtmHyGf23b
Solar is set to overtake generation capacity of all other power sources by 2027.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) January 10, 2024
In three years, it will overtake gas.
In four years, it will push past coal.
And it's creating jobs as it does it.
We have the solutions. Implement them. #ActOnClimate#climate #energy #renewables pic.twitter.com/3g8bpNjpCJ
Wind power turbine fleet output grows 25% in Germany over five years.#renewables #windpower #climate #ClimateAction https://t.co/n7LXYuxOOw
— Dr Paul Dorfman (@dorfman_p) January 10, 2024
More on the Environment and Nature:
Poland to halt logging in 10 of its most ancient forests https://t.co/LDXSxcEYSN
— Guardian Environment (@guardianeco) January 9, 2024
#Norway has just voted to allow Deep Sea mining for first time in one of last untouched and pristine places on Earth
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) January 9, 2024
Norway will open up 280,000 sq km (108,000 sq miles) of its waters for mining- an area bigger than size of UK.
This is a criminal act of ecocide against nature https://t.co/rCRX4v4A4W pic.twitter.com/xApR5q43VW
This is one of most destructive acts in human history against ocean life
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) January 9, 2024
Norway will not only destroy marine life in last untouched place on Earth but also disturb a critical carbon sink in deep sea ocean and fuel even more warming
Boycott #Norway – do not holiday or buy https://t.co/7Im31CiHDz pic.twitter.com/JkKd0hD3me
A Manta Ray weaves in and out of plastic bags and litter in search of food at Manta Point in Bali. We must do better.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) January 9, 2024
Nature is amazing. Protect it. #PassOnPlastic #Wasteless #Useless #Buyless #biodiversity #oceans pic.twitter.com/bRTerCphOD
During Monday’s State of the State address, Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs committed to protecting the state’s groundwater supplies in the face of opposition from Arizona’s powerful farm lobby.https://t.co/FGY8HWRXnH
— Inside Climate News (@insideclimate) January 9, 2024
BBC News – Spain pollution: Millions of plastic pellets wash up on coast
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) January 9, 2024
Huge nurdle pollution here#nurdles@FidraTweetshttps://t.co/AqjZFxiWx5
Fast Fashion and Its Environmental Impact
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) January 10, 2024
Even washing clothes releases 500,000 tons of microfibres into ocean each year, equivalent of 50 billion plastic bottles
and is responsible for 10% of global carbon emissions
85% all textiles go to dumps each yearhttps://t.co/4bympRRCet
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
“They found that on average, a liter of bottled water contained some 240,000 detectable plastic fragments—10 to 100 times greater than previous estimates.” https://t.co/NkqdkeiiWz
— David Wallace-Wells (@dwallacewells) January 9, 2024
Trees filter CO2, carbon monoxide or Sulphur dioxide from the air. But also tire and brake abrasion, soot particles and aerosols. 99 out of 100 particles can be filtered in this way. A 100-year-old tree frees the atmosphere from about one tone of dust per year.💚🌿🌱☘️🌳🌲🍀💚 pic.twitter.com/4J6R1JW3yv
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 10, 2024
Night thoughts
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) January 9, 2024
I am always fascinated by the beauty and power with which nature presents itself to us. This is Sequoia National Park in California, USA.💚🌿🌱☘️🌳🌲🍀💚
📷 unknown pic.twitter.com/iPfDRGn1ad