The Columbus Dispatch

2020 has been hot in Ohio, across US

- Dinah Voyles Pulver

Temperatur­es soared higher than normal across much of the nation in June and through the first six months of 2020, putting the country on track for what could be another one of its warmest years on record.

Every one of the 48 contiguous states saw above-normal average temperatur­es during the first half of the year, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion reported in its most recent update on climate conditions in the United States and around the world.

The average temperatur­e for the United States, excluding Alaska and Hawaii, from January through June was 50 degrees, 2.4 degrees above normal. It was the eighth-warmest January-tojune period on record.

In Ohio, the year-to-date average daily temperatur­e on June 30 was 48.2 degrees, 2.8 degrees warmer than normal.

The agency expects that trend to continue.

An intense heatwave gripped much of the country in July, and NOAA’S outlook for the next three months shows above-normal chances for warmerthan-normal temperatur­es.

Of the 48 states, 38 were hotter than normal in June, setting many records and prompting heat advisories from state and federal officials.

In Ohio, this June’s average temperatur­e — 70.7 — was 1.8 degrees warmer than the previous century’s average.

Overall, the country was also dryer than normal in June, said Ahira Sánchez-lugo, a NOAA climatolog­ist.

In the Arctic, a team with the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on is working to confirm a temperatur­e reading of 100.4 in Siberia in June. If confirmed, it would be the highest temperatur­e ever recorded north of the Arctic Circle, said Randy Cerveny at Arizona State University.

Globally, five of the warmest years on record have occurred since 2015, and nine of the 10 warmest have occurred since 2005.

“The year 2020 is almost certain to rank among the warmest years on record, with a 35.8% chance of it being the warmest year on record,” said Sánchez-lugo. The chances of the year being the secondwarm­est on record are above 40%, she said. The combined average temperatur­e over land and the ocean across the globe for the first six months of 2020 was less than one-tenth of a degree from being the warmest first six months of the year on record.

The biggest departures in normal temperatur­es for the nation for the first half of the year were in the Northeast.

“The entire region was 3 to 9 degrees above normal,” said Jessica Spaccio, a climatolog­ist at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell University. It was the warmest June on record in Caribou, Maine. Spaccio said it was the third-warmest January to June on record in New Jersey and fourth-warmest in Massachuse­tts and Rhode Island.

Retiree Leslie Pearce lives just outside Boston in a home her father built in 1976. The unrelentin­g heat this summer has Pearce considerin­g replacing the home’s window air conditioni­ng unit.

“It’s been awful,” Pearce said. Most people didn’t install central air conditioni­ng when the house was built, she said. “Times have changed.”

In NOAA’S Ohio Valley region, the average temperatur­e was 2 degrees warmer than the mean over the previous century, making it the 18th warmest January to June on record.

Florida is enduring its warmest year on record.

Conditions have been “just off the charts,” said Brian Mcnoldy, a senior research associate at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheri­c Science.

In Miami and Key West, “from one hour to the next, meteorolog­ists are looking to see what record has been broken,” Mcnoldy said. “It’s hard to keep up with, either some record for the day, for the month, for the year or the year to date. It’s a never-ending stream.”

Other coastal towns throughout the Southeast are experienci­ng one of their warmest years on record, including New Orleans, Savannah and Cape Hatteras.

“With the continued upward trends we’re seeing, it just makes it that much harder to be ‘normal,’ and it makes it that much easier to break record highs because you’re off to kind of a head start.”

Part of the reason for those warm temperatur­es is likely the warmer-thannormal sea surface temperatur­es, Mcnoldy said. That may be especially true in the warm overnight lows.

“Rather than being able to fall to 76 or 77 degrees at night, if you’re surrounded by an ocean that’s 85 degrees, there’s no way you’re going to cool off that much,” Mcnoldy said. “And, if the sun comes up and it’s already 84 degrees, you’re just going to go up from there.”

Overnight lows experience­d a similar trend, with all of the 48 states averaging at least 1.4 degrees warmer than normal. Nightly minimum temperatur­es in Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts and New Jersey were 4.5 degrees warmer than the normal average.

In Ohio, the average minimum temperatur­e so far this year was 38.8 degrees, 3.8 degrees warmer than normal.

Across the country in June, record warm daily low temperatur­e records were set 3,181 times.

The hotter weather has taken a deadly toll. Just 10 days into June, for example, Maricopa County, Arizona, had already reported three heat-related deaths. The nation averages 702 heat-related deaths a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and scholars expect that number to rise exponentia­lly as temperatur­es continue to warm.

It no longer surprises Marshall Shepherd, former president of the American Meteorolog­ical Society and director of the atmospheri­c science program at the University of Georgia, to hear heat records are being broken.

It only underscore­s the critical issues with climate change, he said, such as “how resilient the nation is and how vulnerable population­s are going to continue to bear the brunt of this heat and extreme rainfall events.”

 ?? [ERIC ALBRECHT/DISPATCH] ?? Youths play basketball on the courts at Livingston Park located next to Nationwide Children’s Hospital on March 26.
[ERIC ALBRECHT/DISPATCH] Youths play basketball on the courts at Livingston Park located next to Nationwide Children’s Hospital on March 26.

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