Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

This winter was the state’s warmest

Season nearly 10 degrees above Wisconsin average

- Claire Reid

Last week, weather experts confirmed what many have been predicting for the past few weeks — this was in fact Wisconsin’s warmest-ever winter on record.

The Wisconsin State Climatolog­y Office announced Friday that December 2023-February 2024 was the warmest winter in the state since record-keeping began in 1895.

This winter was nearly 10 degrees warmer than Wisconsin’s three-month winter normal of 18.5 degrees. The three-month average temperatur­e across the state was 28.3 degrees, more than two degrees warmer than Wisconsin’s previous warmest-ever winter in 2001-2002, which saw a three-month average of 26.1 degrees.

Numerous smaller weather records were set during this record-setting winter.

December 2023 was Wisconsin’s warmest last month of the year on record. It was the first time the statewide average December temp was above freezing (the month’s average was 32.3 degrees), and the month was only about two degrees colder than November.

Thanks to nine days of well-belownorma­l temperatur­es during mid-January’s cold snap, the first month of the year was only Wisconsin’s 10th warmest on the books. Still, this January was 8.5 degrees warmer than normal, on average. Only one state, Minnesota, saw a warmer January in relation to average this year.

This February was also Wisconsin’s warmest ever. The statewide average temp was 31.8 degrees, according to state climatolog­ist Steve Vavrus. This is more than 16 degrees above the average February temperatur­e. Wisconsin’s previous warmest-ever February occurred in 1998 with a statewide average temp of 31.6, WKOW 27 reported.

“This was a historical­ly warm winter, not only in Wisconsin but in most of the northern half of the country,” Vavrus said.

Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, North Dakota, New York, New Hampshire and Vermont also saw their warmest winters on record. Five additional states recorded their second-warmest winters.

Furthermor­e, the contiguous United States experience­d its warmest-ever winter, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. The country recorded a three-month average temp of 37.6 degrees, more than five degrees above average.

This winter’s unseasonab­ly warm weather set the stage for other notable weather records throughout the state.

These included Wisconsin’s firstever and only February tornado, which touched down near Edgerton and Evansville on Feb. 8. The tornado spun up, in part, due to record-setting warm temperatur­es. Usually, cold weather prevents winter tornadoes from happening in Wisconsin. The Feb. 8 tornado was one of only five winter tornadoes in the state’s recent history.

Interestin­gly, the National Weather Service issued more tornado and thundersto­rm warnings than winter storm warnings and other winter weather advisories in Wisconsin this winter. Five tornado warnings, eight severe thundersto­rm warnings and six winter weather advisories were issued this season. NWS did not issue any thundersto­rm or tornado warnings in Wisconsin last winter.

Wisconsin also recorded its highest February and highest winter temperatur­e of all time — 77 degrees in Kenosha on Feb. 27, Vavrus said. This shattered the previous February and winter record by five degrees.

This was quickly followed by a record-setting temperatur­e drop across the state, with temps plummeting 60 degrees in some areas overnight. In Milwaukee, temps tanked from 74 degrees on the afternoon of Feb. 27 to just 16 degrees the following morning.

“The extreme warmth this winter was likely caused by a combinatio­n of the El Niño event in the Pacific Ocean and the long-term climatic warming trend,” Vavrus explained.

An El Niño event is caused when sea surface temperatur­es in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean warm to above average for several months. During an El Niño, the polar jet stream is shifted northward, which limits how far south cold-air intrusions from Canada can travel into Wisconsin.

In general, El Niño brings above-average temperatur­es to the northern United States, which often result in below-average snowfall in moderate-tostrong El Niño years. Last year, the Milwaukee-area NWS said this winter’s El Niño was on track to be one of the strongest on record.

But what about climate change? Climatolog­y is the study of weather over time, local NWS meteorolog­ist Taylor Patterson said. So, when it comes to whether a singular event like this season’s El Niño was caused by climate change, it’s hard to say right away.

When studying climate change, “you look at multiple events over a year or longer,” Patterson said. So, regarding the cause of El Niño and this season’s incredibly warm winter, “We don’t really know, but it’s definitely something that we’ll be looking back on as we start to look at it in context to previous years and into the future” when studying the climate.

Wisconsin is expected to see the “tail end” of the El Niño effect in March, April and May, said local NWS meteorolog­ist Jaclyn Anderson. While exact temps are unknown, this three-month period has a “higher potential for seeing abovenorma­l temperatur­es” throughout the state.

“The impacts we get from El Niño during the winter will loosen their grip in the summer,” Anderson said. “There’s not a strong correlatio­n between El Niño and what happens in the summertime.”

While the Climate Prediction Center expects El Niño to become more neutral in the summer months, it also says there are “increasing odds” of a La Niña effect developing next winter.

La Niña allows more Arctic air to make its way down to the Midwest, Anderson said, and can cause the opposite effects of El Niño — meaning we could see a colder, snowier winter in 2025.

Journal Sentinel reporter Alex Groth contribute­d to this report.

 ?? JULIE GRACE IMMINK / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Plungers ring in the New Year with an iceless splash at the annual Polar Bear Plunge at Bradford Beach in Milwaukee. A warm December kept Lake Michigan open.
JULIE GRACE IMMINK / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Plungers ring in the New Year with an iceless splash at the annual Polar Bear Plunge at Bradford Beach in Milwaukee. A warm December kept Lake Michigan open.

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