Santa Fe New Mexican

Scientists predict summer will be a scorcher

West, Northeast are expected to be hard hit

- By Henry Fountain and John Schwartz

Following a May that tied for the hottest on record, the United States is heading into a potentiall­y blistering summer, with hotter than normal temperatur­es expected across almost the entire country into September, government researcher­s said Thursday.

Dan Collins, a meteorolog­ist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Climate Prediction Center, said that for July, August and September across almost the entire United States “the average temperatur­es are likely to be above normal,” especially in the West and Northeast.

The trends over the last few decades are clear. The most recent figures are in line with a general warming trend: Each decade since the 1960s has been warmer than the one before, and the five hottest years occurred in the second half of the last decade.

High temperatur­es were likeliest in the mid-Atlantic states, Northeast and New England, and across much of the West, Rocky Mountains and Southwest.

Only a small part of the Midwest, centered around

Missouri, has an equal chance of lower-than-normal temperatur­es, according to an analysis by the Climate Prediction Center.

That warmth will likely mean that drought conditions, experience­d by nearly one-fourth of the country, will persist through the summer, scientists said.

Globally, last month was tied with 2016 for the hottest May on record, with average land and sea temperatur­es that were 0.95 degrees Celsius, or 1.71 degrees Fahrenheit, above the average dating back more than a century.

Areas with the warmest average temperatur­es included Alaska, the southweste­rn United States, the Caribbean, parts of Western Europe and northern Asia.

But May was also cooler than average across much of the Plains and the East Coast, said Karin Gleason, a NOAA climatolog­ist. It is now virtually certain that globally, 2020 will be one of the five hottest years on record, she said.

But it is less likely that 2020 will eclipse 2016 as the hottest ever. NOAA now estimates there is about a 50 percent chance that 2020 will be a record breaker, down from about 75 percent a month ago.

Gavin Schmidt, director the Goddard Institute for Space Studies at NASA, said that the new informatio­n is in line with what is known about climate change.

“There is a long-term trend in temperatur­es driven by human activity that is going to lead to more and more records being broken,” he said. “Not every month, not every year — but this will keep happening as long as we continue to emit carbon dioxide.”

How is this any different? Summer months have been getting hotter, a consequenc­e of human-caused emissions of heat-trapping gases.

July is the hottest month of all on a global average (even though it is winter in the Southern Hemisphere).

July 2019 was the hottest ever, with an average temperatur­e that was 1.7 degrees Fahrenheit higher than the 20th century average for the month.

Could last July have been an anomaly, an extreme swing in a variable climate?

No — it is the continuati­on of a trend.

The five hottest Julys have occurred in the last five years, and nine of the 10 hottest have occurred since 2005.

 ?? BRITTANY GREESON/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Chef Antjuan Durand tries to cool off while grilling in July in Detroit. Hotter than normal temperatur­es are expected across most of the United States into September, researcher­s said.
BRITTANY GREESON/NEW YORK TIMES Chef Antjuan Durand tries to cool off while grilling in July in Detroit. Hotter than normal temperatur­es are expected across most of the United States into September, researcher­s said.

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