N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Compiled by Karin Gleason and Chris Fenimore Climate Monitoring Branch.

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Presentation transcript:

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Compiled by Karin Gleason and Chris Fenimore Climate Monitoring Branch

N ational C limatic D ata C enter Overview Temperatures Precipitation Tornadoes Tropical Cyclones Midwest Flooding Drought 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

N ational C limatic D ata C enter Temperatures 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States The 2008 YTD (Jan-Oct) preliminary national average temperature was 55.93°F (43rd warmest on record – near the LTM). Most recent cooler YTD period occurred in For YTD period (Jan-Oct), only 2 states with much above average temperatures (New Jersey & Delaware). No large-scale heat outbreaks occurred on either a monthly or seasonal time scale during 2008.

N ational C limatic D ata C enter Temperatures – cont’d For YTD period (Jan-Oct), Southeast Region average temperature was 65.3°F, which is equal to the long-term mean. On an annual basis, 2007 ranked 13 th warmest across the Southeast Region with an average temperature of 64.1°F Climate Highlights for the United States

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Precipitation For YTD period (Jan-Oct), persistent wetness from the Great Plains to the Northeast. Wettest YTD period for Missouri and New Hampshire. Second wettest for Illinois and Massachusetts. The 2008 YTD (Jan-Oct) preliminary average national precipitation was inches (26 th wettest on record). California had its driest Spring and March-August periods on record.

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Precipitation – cont’d Driest March-October period for West Region (CA & NV). Both 2007 and 2008 have been extremely dry. Nevada had driest March- September period on record.

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States 2 nd largest January tornado outbreak on record with 54 confirmed tornado reports on the 7 th & 8 th. Tornadoes February 5: The “Super Tuesday Outbreak” - 87 tornadoes occurred while 24 states held primary elections deaths, the highest number of fatalities from a single outbreak since May 31, 1985 (76 deaths).

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States May was a very active month as 460 tornadoes were confirmed, making it the third most active May on record. June had two additional outbreaks causing 289 confirmed tornadoes. Tornadoes – cont’d The high number of tornado-related fatalities during the first half of 2008 makes this one of the top ten deadliest January- October periods since reliable records began in 1953.

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Tropical Cyclones General Overview & U.S. Landfalling Tropical Cyclones Above average Atlantic TC Season: 16 named storms (avg. 11.0), 8 hurricanes (avg. 6.2), 5 major hurricanes (avg. 2.7). Below average Pacific TC Season: 17 named storms (avg. 15.3), 7 hurricanes (avg. 8.8), 2 major hurricanes (avg. 4.2). U.S. Landfalling Atlantic Tropical Cyclones of 2008

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Tropical Cyclones – cont’d North Atlantic Basin Above normal activity: 4 storms formed before the start of August. 2nd most destructive season on record with up to $54 billion in damage (2008 USD) ($128 billion reported in 2005) is the only year on record in which a major hurricane existed in every month from July through November in the North Atlantic (Bertha, Gustav, Ike, Omar, and Paloma). Earliest known date for 3 storms to be active on the same day: Hurricane Bertha, and Tropical Storms Cristobal and Dolly (July 20). Tropical Storm Fay was the first tropical system on record to make landfall in one state four times.

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Tropical Cyclones – cont’d Atlantic Major Storms (*Preliminary Statistics) StormDurationIntensityDamage Estimate BerthaJuly 3 - July mph 956 mb IkeSeptember 1 - September mph 935 mb $31.5 billion GustavAugust 25 - September mph 941 mb $18 billion OmarOctober 13 - October mph 959 mb PalomaNovember 5 - November mph 943 mb $1.4 billion

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Midwest Flooding Successive rain events across the Midwest caused significant flooding across portions of IA, IL, MO, IN and WI. Record amounts of rainfall fell in the Upper Mississippi Basin in June setting 15 new all-time daily precipitation records. 170 stations reported precipitation totals for June which ranked within their top five records. 83 of Iowa's 99 counties were declared disaster areas by the state Governor. Storms and flooding across six states killed 24 people, injured 148 and caused more than $1.5 billion in estimated damage in Iowa alone.

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Midwest Flooding – cont’d

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Drought Severe to extreme drought across contiguous U.S. at the end of Dec ‘07 was ~18% (down to ~14% by end of Oct ‘08) (PDSI). ~35% of contiguous U.S. was classified in moderate to exceptional drought (D1-D4, USDM) in January (down to ~21% by November).

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Drought – cont’d Drought remained entrenched across parts of the Southeast throughout the year, although the spatial extent was lessened by the end of the year. California had its driest spring and March - August on record. The drought conditions fueled wildfires which made the 2008 fire season possibly the worst in California history. Severe drought present across portions of Texas in mid-2008 was mitigated by Hurricane Dolly, TS Edouard and Hurricane Ike.

N ational C limatic D ata C enter 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Drought – cont’d Palmer Drought Index statistics for the contiguous U.S.: Peaked at 31% moderate-extreme drought in Jun-Jul 2008 Peaked at 29% moderate-extreme wet spell in Dec 2008