Contact: Patricia Viets, NOAA,(301) 457-5005 NOAA 99-83
Scott Smullen, NOAA, (301) 713-0622 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Taysir
Al-Ghnaem, WMO, 0041 22 730 8315 12/13/99
0041 22 730 8027 (fax)
1999: U.S. EXPERIENCES SECOND WARMEST YEAR ON RECORD;
GLOBAL TEMPERATURES CONTINUE WARMING TREND
For the calendar year 1999, the Commerce Department's National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration projects that the United
States will have experienced its second warmest year on record since
1900 with an average for 1999 of 55.7 degrees F. This follows 1998's
all time record of 56.4 degrees. The values for both years exceed
those of the warm decade of the 1930s. 1999 is consistent with a
long-term warming trend observed in the United States (0.5 degrees
C per century), with a substantial portion of the warming occurring
since the mid-1970s.
NOAA expects every state except California in 1999 to be above
normal and 22 states from the Rockies to Maine much above normal.
Numerous records for warmth were set during certain months of the
year. Temperatures for November turned out to be the warmest on
record. During November, eight states from the Northwest to the
Great Lakes were ranked as having the warmest November on record;
39 states were ranked as much above normal. Many cities set records
for the warmest temperature ever in November; one state (South Dakota)
set a state record for the warmest temperature ever recorded in
the state for the month. Other heat episodes occurred during February
(third warmest nationally) and during July and August, when many
locations in the Ohio Valley and eastern seaboard set monthly or
all time records for heat. The heat continued into September in
the Northeast, with New England states experiencing one of the warmest
Septembers on record.
Global Temperatures
Global temperatures for 1999 are expected to be the fifth warmest
on record since 1880, NOAA and the World Meteorological Organization
reported. Globally, the departure from the long-term average (1880-1998)
was 0.42 degrees C (0.76 F).
Land temperatures continued near-record warmth (averaging 13.9
degrees C or 56.9 F; 0.79 degrees C or 1.42 F above the long term
average) second only to 1998, but ocean temperatures were the lowest
since 1994. Just as the warm oceans associated with
(More)
(2)
El Niño last year contributed to the record high temperatures,
the cooler ocean conditions in 1999 associated with La Niña
helped to ameliorate what might otherwise have been an even warmer
year. Although ocean temperatures were among the lowest of the past
decade, they still averaged 15.5 degrees C (59.8 F) or 0.26 degrees
C (0.47 F) above the long-term average.
The new data continue to confirm that the near-surface temperatures
during the 20th century have been rising. A long-term
temperature increase of 0.06 degrees C per decade (0.11 degrees
F per decade) has occurred during the 20th century. There
have been two sustained periods of warming, one beginning around
1910 and ending around 1945 (approximately 0.1 degrees C per decade),
and the most recent beginning about 1976. Temperatures during the
latter period of warming have increased to a rate of 0.2 degrees
C/decade. This is comparable to the rates of warming projected by
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to occur during the
next century due to anthropogenic effects.
NOAA's values for 1999 include an estimate for global temperatures
for December. Updated values for 1999 will be available on Jan.
14, 2000.
Precipitation in the United States
The United States experienced a near-normal year for precipitation,
with nationally averaged precipitation of 30.60 inches, which was
1.05 inches below average. Although the national value was not unusual,
there were significant regional variations. The year began on a
wet note in the eastern United States; however, a dry spell that
became established in April led to record-setting growing season
dryness throughout the Ohio Valley and Northeast. This was the driest
or second driest April-July period in all states from West Virginia
to Maine. For the 12-month period from September 1998-August 1999,
most of these states experienced either record or near-record dryness.
The drought was followed by record-setting rainfall as two hurricanes
traversed the eastern seaboard in September. States from North Carolina
to Maine experienced a record or near-record wet September and numerous
locations reported their heaviest 24-hour precipitation, wettest
September or wettest any month on record.
In the Pacific Northwest, La Niña-induced precipitation
produced locally heavy rainfall totals, with locations in western
Washington reporting their wettest February and wettest water year
on record. Cold temperatures led to a record-setting snow pack in
the northern Cascades, with Mt Baker, Wash., setting a U.S. record
for the most snowfall in a snow season (1140 inches). The snow melt
from this snow pack provided sufficient irrigation for crops as
the conditions in the region turned very dry in the late spring
and summer seasons.
Historical precipitation records for the United States show an
annual increase of approximately 2.1 inches over the past 100 years.
This is consistent with a long-term increase of 5 to 10 percent.
However, 1999 is the first year since 1989 with an annual total
(30.60 inches) below the long-term average of 31.65 inches, and
is the driest year since the drought year of 1988.
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NOTE: The 1999 statistics, including regional and seasonal
variations in the global pictures and global precipitation, can
be found at: http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/annual1999.html |