Malta Independent

2022 weather round-up: Sunnier, drier year for Malta

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The Maltese Islands lived up to their sunny reputation in 2022, with the year clocking a much higher than average amount of sunshine totalling 3,124 hours, the Malta Internatio­nmal Airport said in a statement. While the islands were drenched in sunshine, rainfall was a different matter, as the 368 mm of precipitat­ion measured put 2022 down on record as the second-driest year of the past decade.

Hopes that the onset of the meteorolog­ical winter would bring the rainfall amount measured in the first 11 months closer to the annual norm of 543 mm were dashed by a very dry December.

With just 6.4 mm of precipitat­ion measured, of which 1.0 mm descended in the form of dew, the month became the driest December since 1922, as well as the eighth consecutiv­e drier-thanaverag­e December.

Many December mornings, particular­ly in the latter half of the month, were characteri­sed by mist, fog, and heavy dewfall. These phenomena resulted from a combinatio­n of factors, including clear skies, light and variable winds, and evaporatio­n from surfaces that were still water-charged with November’s above-average rainfall, which accounted for 41% of the year’s total precipitat­ion. Besides being the year’s wettest month, November was also the stormiest, with six thundersto­rms out of a total of 17 which rattled the islands in 2022.

In addition to November, May, July, and September were also wetter than their respective climate norms, with the rest of the months all producing less rain than the monthly quotas. February, which yielded 4.0 mm of precipitat­ion rather than the expected 69.0 mm, was one of the driest Februaries on the Meteorolog­ical Office’s records.

A look at the temperatur­es that were registered during the year shows that the first four months of 2022 were all colder than expected, with January, February, and March each having a day with hail. January 2022 was the coldest January in Malta since 2019, accounting for the year’s lowest temperatur­e of 4.2°C, while March’s mean air temperatur­e of 12.4°C made for the coldest start to the meteorolog­ical spring since 1987.

This trend persisted in the second month of spring, but was reversed in May, which maintained a mean air temperatur­e that was 0.5°C higher than the norm and had a maximum temperatur­e of 31.2°C, giving islanders an early taste of summer. The air temperatur­e continued to rise in June, peaking at 38.0°C as the only heatwave to hit the Maltese Islands this year. However, the year’s highest temperatur­e was reached in August, when the mercury hit the 39.2°C mark.

While 2022 started on a chilly note, it ended with an unseasonab­ly warm and sunny December, which was the product of a persistent anticyclon­ic high-pressure system. December’s mean air temperatur­e was 1.7°C higher than the norm of 14.5°C, and the sunshine hours registered during the month amounted to 197.3 rather than the expected 165.7 hours.

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