
NOAA: Above Average Temperatures in U.S. for August, Summer;
Midwest Much Drier than Average in August, South Much Wetter
This June-August 2008 summer season was the 22nd warmest on record for the contiguous United States, according to an analysis by NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C. Also, last month ended as the 39th warmest August for the contiguous United States, based on records dating back to 1895.
[Update by John Goetz: The title has been corrected to indicate that August was the 39th warmest and not the 22nd warmest on record. Thanks to several commenters for pointing this out.]
The average summer temperature of 72.7 degrees F is 0.8 degree F above the 20th century average, based on preliminary data. The average August temperature was 73.2 degrees F, which is 0.4 degree above average.
U.S. Temperature Highlights
- California had its ninth warmest summer, while New Jersey, Connecticut and Rhode Island had their eighth warmest summers.
- The western United States experienced its fourth warmest August on record, with an average temperature of 75.3 degrees F, 2.9 degrees above the 20th century mean.
- While temperatures in most western states were above normal in August, temperatures across much of the eastern half of the U.S. were below normal.
- Cooler temperatures in the east and warmer temperatures in the western U.S. contributed to a near average national residential energy consumption for August and the summer season. Based on NOAA’s Residential Energy Demand Temperature Index, temperature-related energy demand was just 3.5 percent below average in August, and 4.2 percent above average for the summer.
U.S. Precipitation Highlights
- For June through August, precipitation across the contiguous United States averaged 9.05 inches, 0.8 inch above the 1901-2000 average and ranks as the 15th wettest summer since 1895.
- An average of 3.11 inches fell across the contiguous U.S. in August, 0.51 inch above average. This was the ninth wettest August on record for the nation.
- Eight states (Colorado, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida) were much wetter than average for August. Mississippi had its all-time wettest August, and Florida and Alabama their second wettest August on record.
- Seven states (Delaware, Iowa, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Michigan, and Wisconsin) were much drier than average. Delaware had its driest August on record, Kentucky had its third driest August and Wisconsin ranked sixth driest.
- Drought conditions in the southeast United States improved slightly in August, thanks to heavy rains from Tropical Storm Fay. However, the western Carolinas remained in exceptional drought and severe-to-extreme drought affected eastern Tennessee, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, western North Dakota, Texas, and several of the Hawaiian Islands, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Moderate-to- severe drought also covered nearly all of California and much of Nevada. At the end of August, 24 percent of the contiguous U.S. was in moderate to extreme drought, a decrease of four percent from July.
- Fay also brought extensive flooding to Florida, where Jacksonville and Tallahassee each recorded 16.5 inches of rain, making this the wettest August on record for these cities. Thomasville, Ga., totaled 27.5 inches in August, and Fort Pierce, Fla., and Orlando broke their all-time 24-hour precipitation records with 8.84 and 8.23 inches, respectively. August 20-22 saw 18.48 inches of rain fall in Melbourne, Fla., a three-day record.
Other Highlights
- Four named Atlantic tropical cyclones – Tropical Storm Edouard, Tropical Storm Fay Hurricane Gustav and Hurricane Hanna – developed in August. Edouard made landfall in Port Arthur, Texas on Aug. 5. Fay made an initial landfall in Key West, Fla., on Aug. 18. Gustav struck Grand Isle, La., on Sept. 1. August usually sees an average of three Atlantic/Caribbean tropical cyclones and on average one makes landfall in the U.S. every 2.3 years.
- Severe weather in the Chicago area on August 4 left nearly a half million residents without power, spawned at least three tornadoes and prompted travelers at O’Hare International Airport to be evacuated to lower levels, and a sell-out crowd at Wrigley Field to seek shelter in interior concourses. Nearly 350 flights were cancelled at O’Hare.
- Wildfires scorched parts of 12 states in August, primarily in the northwestern United States. From January 1 – August 29, 64,034 wildfires have burned more than 4.5 million acres of the United States, according to statistics from the National Interagency Fire Center. While the number of fires was above the 1999-2008 average, the acreage burnt was approximately one million acres less than average for the year-to-date.
NOAA understands and predicts changes in the Earth’s environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages our coastal and marine resources.
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Mike Bentley,
A very interesting perspective, sir.
dear mr evanjones:
my previous posts tried to be “chistosos” (jokes) please don’t offended by them. my english is as bad as your spanish!!!
Charles V, the head of a multispeaking peoples also said that he used the italian to sing, the french to make love, the german to command… and the castellado to speak with god…
[REPLY – My dear fellow! Not at all! I was highly amused, as intended. (However, just to keep the record straight, it is obvious that your English is far superior to my Spanish.)]
I live in CT and my impression of August is that it has been quite cool. In fact, the leaves on the trees have started to change in many areas –which is unusual for this time of year.
Not totally related, but am I detecting a flattening at the bottom of the ice melt?
http://www.ijis.iarc.uaf.edu/en/home/seaice_extent.htm
Still pretty low, and probably rivaled the 2007 levels more than I anticipated earlier in the summer, but despite the best wishes for a record ice melt, it appears unlikely to happen, though I suppose anything’s still possible.
If anyone is interested, I ran a few numbers on the changing slope patters by global region, using the RSS data. The Arctic warming over the last 30 years has been very real, and explains why there would be a high ice melt. But different regions of the planet vary greatly in the warming patterns, so warming, particularly at the same rate, has been far from global (in fact, the 30 year Antarctic trend is negative).
One thing is consistent across all regions, though… recent trends are negative. Some only for 3 years, and some for many years now. And the downturn is fairly dramatic across all regions. The Arctic is no different. Ice still melts because it reached such a high temperature anomaly that when it started to cool, the anomalies are still high enough to continue the melting cycle. But it would appear that will end if current trends continue. There has been a cooling from peak temperature in the Arctic since 2002. Only now are temps reaching a point to look like they will be able to support increasing ice formation.
The link is here if interested. It’s not complicated, but i thought it was an interesting comparison:
http://digitaldiatribes.wordpress.com/2008/09/08/september-2008-update-on-global-temperature-rss-part-2/
something is very wrong
New Jersey, Connecticut and Rhode Island had their eighth warmest summers
I live in those states. For the first in 20 years I did not turn on the air conditioner once. Something is very very wrong with the records
Anthony, the Science dude next door to you isn’t buying the surface stations could be in error. He thinks Dot Earth is just great.
http://sciencedude.freedomblogging.com/2008/09/12/has-santa-ana-been-reporting-wrong-temperatures-for-years/#comment-4710
peerreviewer: You must be rich to live in three states …
Anyway, further to my previous post, I was in Floriday in August, and was fallowing the weather before I went. It was cloudy and warm all month, rather than the usual Hot.
I think that this 74th coolest August must be based on the faulty surfase stations.
“The average August temperature was 73.2 degrees F, which is 0.4 degree above average.”
That, with the sulfate aerosols and ash above, evidences that we are all going to boil in a few months.
Forgot the reference:
http://www.doas-bremen.de/
Bull **** this was not all that warm.Only on land observations contaminated by heat-island warming at most airports as well as sprawling exburbs whose heat islands have grown big time all over the country in the last decade or two. Satelite observations tell a different story with near to slightly below for the whole summer as well as August.STOP posting such junk data by tainted land data on this site! This is not NCDC”S
website
I am in Houston. My okra crop was pathetic. It was the same seed, same soil, plenty of water and nutrients. Okra loves hot weather and production slows if it is not hot. This year I got maybe 10% of last years yield.
George Mink III,
Take a deep breath, everyone here knows what is going on. This website is concerned with “Commentary on puzzling things in life, nature, science, technology, and recent news by Anthony Watts”. I am sure you agree that NCDCs announcement is puzzling. If he doesn’t post it, how can we comment on it?
Mike Bryant:
Lord Voldemort….. Attacks Again
….The amount of sea ice around Antarctica has grown in recent Septembers in what could be an unusual side-effect of global warming, experts say…..
http://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn14724-antarctic-sea-ice-increases-despite-warming.html
Fernando,
Did you see the movie “The Day After Tomorrow”? When everything flash freezes, global warming will be the culprit. I heard there will be a sequel, “The Day After The Day After Tomorrow”.
It does not matter what happens, global warming is causing everything. Especially if it is hurting cute animals. Of course it helps mean and evil animals like snakes, spiders, crabs and sharks.
Cold Goeth Before the Fall [This Cold, Sad August]
The climate this Fall [This August]
I don’t like at all, [I do not like]
My main squeeze [My girlfriend]
Is in a deep freeze. [Is so cold]
At the risk of being rude [And the humidity]
She just ain’t in the mood. [Is below average]
I complain a lot [I lament]
When she ain’t hot . . . [Without heat]
So I can get lusted [Where can I]
Where can I get her adjusted? [Get her adjusted]
“New Jersey, Connecticut and Rhode Island had their eighth warmest summers”
Didn’t make it to New Jersey this year but when I passed through Rhode Island on my way from Boston to Mystic, CT, it was definitely the hottest, coldest and most average August day I have experienced in RI since 2004. Connecticut was very pleasant except when that rather rude Hanna lady came to call one Saturday evening and extinguished the ciggy I was enjoying on my friend’s patio.
I sincerely hope this is just in the climate section and hasn’t filtered over to the space organization again. We don’t need to lose more space pioneers to human foolishness.
I literally wouldn’t trust NASA to change my oil, or even to check my tire pressures – and, fwiw, I just don’t need their diapers. What a bunch of abject losers NASA is, imo. Give me my money back. If I had practiced ER medicine like NASA/Hansen now thinks, many would have died and/or I wouldn’t have been in business for more than a few months. NASA, what a bunch of very especially despicable losers it has become: now Hansen and NASA, and NOAA, even want to kill off billions of people, in order to “save” them – naturally.
Imo, they should start with themselves.
NASA has lost its climate credibility. The fact that they (mostly) don’t rely on satellite data always struck me as a little funny. Those unfamiliar with NASA/GISS seem unaware that they are just using heated-up NOAA surface data, which in turn, as we well know, has been called into serious question.
Lehman Brothers .. died because of AGW .. who knew ?
Are government employees allowed to sit on private sector boards ?