NOAA: Summer Temperature Below Average for U.S.
Source here
September 10, 2009
The average June-August 2009 summer temperature for the contiguous United States was below average – the 34th coolest on record, according to a preliminary analysis by NOAA’s National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C. August was also below the long-term average. The analysis is based on records dating back to 1895.
U.S. Temperature Highlights – Summer

High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
- For the 2009 summer, the average temperature of 71.7 degrees F was 0.4 degree F below the 20th Century average. The 2008 average summer temperature was 72.7 degrees F.
- A recurring upper level trough held the June-August temperatures down in the central states, where Michigan experienced its fifth, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and South Dakota their seventh, Nebraska its eighth, and Iowa its ninth coolest summer. By contrast, Florida had its fourth warmest summer, while Washington and Texas experienced their eighth and ninth warmest, respectively.
- The Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota region experienced its sixth coolest summer on record. Only the Northwest averaged above normal temperatures.
U.S. Temperature Highlights – August

High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
- The average 2009 August temperature of 72.2 degrees F was 0.6 degree F below the 20th Century average. Last year’s August temperature was 73.2 degrees F.
- Temperatures were below normal in the Midwest, Plains, and parts of the south. Above-normal temperatures dominated the eastern seaboard, areas in the southwest, and in the extreme northwest.
- Several northeastern states were much above normal for August, including Delaware and New Jersey (eighth warmest), Maine (ninth), and Rhode Island and Connecticut (10th). In contrast, below-normal temperatures were recorded for Missouri and Kansas.
U.S. Precipitation Highlights – Summer

High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
- The Northeast region had its eighth wettest June-August summer on record. By contrast, the South, Southeast and Southwest regions, were drier than average. Arizona had its third driest summer, while both South Carolina and Georgia had their sixth driest.
U.S. Precipitation Highlights – August
- In August, precipitation across the contiguous United States averaged 2.34 inches, which is 0.26 inch below the 1901-2000 average.
- Above-normal averages were generally recorded across the northern U.S., west of the Great Lakes. The South and Southeast regions experienced below-normal precipitation.
- Precipitation across the Southwest region averaged 0.85 inches, which is 1.10 inches below normal and ranks as the 4th driest August on record. Arizona had its fourth driest, New Mexico its fifth, and it was the eighth driest August on record for Colorado, Utah and Texas.

High resolution (Credit: NOAA)
- By the end of August, moderate-to-exceptional drought covered 14 percent of the contiguous United States, based on the U.S. Drought Monitor. Drought intensified in parts of the Pacific Northwest and new drought areas emerged in Arizona and the Carolinas. Montana, Wisconsin and Oklahoma saw minor improvements in their drought conditions.
- About 27 percent of the contiguous United States had moderately-to-extremely wet conditions at the end of August, according to the Palmer Index (a well-known index that measures both drought intensity and wet spell intensity).
Other Highlights
- There were more than 300 low temperature records (counting daily highs and lows) set across states in the Midwest during the last two days of August.
- A total of 7,975 fires burned 1,646,363 acres in August, according to the National Interagency Coordination Center. August 2009 ranked fifth for the number of fires and sixth for acres burned in August this decade. From January through August, 64,682 fires have burned 5.2 million acres across the nation.
NCDC’s preliminary reports, which assess the current state of the climate, are released soon after the end of each month. These analyses are based on preliminary data, which are subject to revision. Additional quality control is applied to the data when late reports are received several weeks after the end of the month and as increased scientific methods improve NCDC’s processing algorithms.
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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tallbloke (15:18:21) : Tomatoes still green here in northern England, and the BBQ summer has given way to a bonfire autumn. Oh well, there’s always next year for the ripe red ones. Chutney again this time.
You ought to try Fried Green Tomatoes. They taste a Lot better than they sound… Slice a green one and fry it with some salt and pepper. Especially good fried in bacon grease with the Spec und Eck (bacon and eggs) in the morning! Fried green are actually better than fried red ones…
Sandy (18:31:28) :
Let’s play “One Man and his Proxy”
Check the NOAA for your area and let us know whether the tomatoes or the air conditioning bill agree??
OK. We have Calif. listed as a bit above average. I’ve done zero A/C (though there were about 4 days when I could have) and my tomatoes say below average by about 5 degrees (and below peak by about 9-10 F. Hot days in 1998 ran about 104 to 105 now were doing about 90 to 95 on the outlier hot days).
Oh, and in aggregate the summer AC electric demand is way down as seen in natural gas consumption for peaking power. We still have a lot of nat gas in storage. In 1998 the peaking power demand (that is largely natural gas turbines) was way higher.
For this summer to come in just slightly below average, I can’t even imagine what the weather must have been like the rest of all those years. It must have snowed half the summer.
UAH temps for September so far are way up via there graph.
US temps so far this month.
http://www.hprcc.unl.edu/products/maps/acis/MonthTDeptUS.png
As cool as summer was for Minnesota, it’s a warm start to the Fall months up here. Feels nice.
E.M.Smith, re California cooler this summer.
The coastal areas were much cooler, with inland areas a bit warmer than average, per NOAA. The link below shows the state’s temp anomalies, by color code.
http://www.calclim.dri.edu/cgi-bin/anomimage.pl?cal90dTvdep.gif
After looking at the map I noticed that the center of North America was cool and the coasts were warm to normal. Now if I were to play amateur climatologist I would speculate that a cooling trend would show up mainly in the center of the largest land masses which would be North America and Asia. The oceans will take a longer time to start showing a cooling trend. So I went here:
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/img/climate/research/2009/jun/map-blended-mntp-200906-pg.gif
and there is a cool trend in the center of Asia too. What is the lag for oceans to show a cooling?
rbateman (15:32:19) :
Mark Serreze is at it again….
Reprehensibly irresponsible: “Blue ocean.”
How a taxpayer-funded “public servant” can get off making egregiously non-scientific and emo statements like that….is beyond me.
They—and their ilk—have existed long past their useful life.
It is time to remove them.
Let the revolution begin.
Chris
Norfolk, VA, USA
Shouldn’t they say 80th warmest?
Greece has been in a cool swath too. We are getting October weather in September.
Lets see what the future brings. It might be a mild winter like last year and then the yearly average will balance off.
In early 2007 meteorologist Debontridder, of the Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium publicly told that in Belgium there occur more and more heat waves in the course of time. A “heat wave” is defined as 5 or more successive days at which the air temperature reaches 30 deg C. Well, here is the number of heat waves in Belgium during the last three years:
in 2007 : zero
in 2008 : zero
in 2009 : zero
But, of course, we know that weather is not climate…
Gary P
Don’t know the answer to your question, but something unusual is happening. The 2009 southern hemisphere winter has been very warm in Australia and there has been speculation that the high pressure ridge has moved south.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/current/statements/scs18a.pdf
The western Pacific seems overly warm, too. Weird.
Jean Meeus (22:56:20) :
“In early 2007 meteorologist Debontridder, of the Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium publicly told that in Belgium there occur more and more heat waves in the course of time. A “heat wave” is defined as 5 or more successive days at which the air temperature reaches 30 deg C. Well, here is the number of heat waves in Belgium during the last three years:
in 2007 : zero
in 2008 : zero
in 2009 : zero
But, of course, we know that weather is not climate…”
Sort of normal again… Holland used to have one heatwave per close to 4 years on average. Thanks to 2007, 2008 and 2009 – no heatwaves – the 21st century now runs exactly one per year.
It must become cooler! Except the summers 2007-09, which were warmer than normal like all summers this century, became progressively warmer.
Things aren’t all that warm anymore in the Pacific.
http://www.osdpd.noaa.gov/data/sst/anomaly/2009/anomnight.9.10.2009.gif
I’d say El Nino’s hovering around the Coasta Rican/ Columbian coast like a camper around a small campfire.Neutral to Nina by December IMHO….
Since this is the closest thread live thread I could find to ask this, I have a question about surfacestations. Is there an up to date text listing of sites remaining to be surveyed? On the site, there is a list dated April of 2008. I am specifically looking for sites in the Adirondack region. I know there were a bunch not surveyed in the Adirondack Park region as of last spring.
Out of curiosity, I just went over and looked at the Chazy, NY site. It was disappointing. After driving through miles of open agricultural land, apple orchards and corn, mostly, I get to the site, and it is in the immediate yard of what looked to be a 4000 sq foot house, near an asphalt driveway, and basically withing about 10 to 20ft of the tree line of a mature wood.
I didn’t do the survey because I wasn’t sure that it was one of the sites in the project, and I would have had to ask permission of the homeowner to do the survey. If it is in the project, I will be happy to do so next weekend.
E.M.Smith (13:33:39) :
“GIStemp, dumber than a tomato!”
Really? Dumber than Katie Couric? Now that’s really something.
😉
How can it be a near average summer in CT (48th), while it was below average in RI (34), MA (27), and NY (27) immediately surrounding CT?
Chef Ramsey working on those books at NOAA now?
More scary, I hate to think what a below average in Summer will mean after this one.
T
TJA–
The most reliable way to figure out what is unsurveyed at surfacestations is using the gallery’s “advanced” feature to pick individual stations from the “Jump to Album” dropdown (which is organized by state and station name) you are interested in to see if there are pictures loaded for it. If there isn’t, it’s available to be surveyed. . . http://gallery.surfacestations.org/main.php?g2_view=search.SearchScan&g2_form%5BuseDefaultSettings%5D=1&g2_return=%2Fmain.php%3F
Geo,
Thanks for that. The Chazy, NY site had been surveyed via Google Earth. Can we submit additional information from an on site survey? I don’t think that you can really survey a site from satellite, especially in rural areas with the resolution not that great. Is there an active thread on this subject anywhere?
Bruce (16:32:07) : Since when is the 39th coldest summer “Near Normal”???
You may have discovered what NOAA means by “near normal” on their graphs.
Here on the west slope of the Rockies in Co., I had not one day at 90° for the first time in seven years. The precip. pattern was unusual with a wet June & July, normal is a 10% chance of being under a cloud with rain for those two months on any given day. The local ‘monsoon’ flow never came at the end of July, in fact shut off the 27th after 2″ for the month, a lot for us. Since July 27th, when we would normally have a recovery from the lack of rain all summer, .34″ have fallen in 8 events over the past seven weeks.
TJA–
Yes, you can submit ground survey pictures to complement a “virtual” survey. I’ve done it myself for Grand Meadow, MN, and it is appreciated.
Anthony promised a new Surface Stations update thread around here one of these days soon. . .
Oh, and the wife is going on walkabout down the big river thru the south in early October and then back again. I’m picking out some sites for her to consider if she is in range at the right time of day for her travels. Maybe a Missouri one or three. . .
There seems to be dialogue exclusive to regional weather patterns. The issue is GLOBAL climate change. Go here for GLOBAL data http://www.lincolnweather.org/Global-Temperature-Anomalies-2009.html