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NEWS

3.14.2008 9:54 AM

Coldest U.S. Winter Since 2001

Even this Cold Winter is Warmer than Average

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Map showing state-by-state temperature anomalies for the 2007-2008 winter. The west was generally cooler, and the east warmer.
The west was generally cooler, and the east warmer, than normal this winter.
Photo: NOAA

By Dan Shapley

The average temperature this winter across the globe, and in the contiguous United States was the coldest since 2001, according to the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration. Still, temperatures were above average when compared to the 20th Century as a whole.

The winter season is described, in this case, as December-February. Here, in NOAA's words, are some highlights:

  • In the contiguous United States, the average winter temperature was 33.2° (F), which was 0.2° F above the 20th century average – yet still ranks as the coolest since 2001. It was the 54th coolest winter since national records began in 1895.

  • Winter temperatures were warmer than average from Texas to the Southeast and along the Eastern Seaboard, while cooler-than-average temperatures stretched from much of the upper Midwest to the West Coast.

  • With higher-than-average temperatures in the Northeast and South, the contiguous U.S. winter temperature-related energy demand was approximately 1.7% lower than average, based on NOAA’s Residential Energy Demand Temperature Index.

  • Winter precipitation was much above average from the Midwest to parts of the West, notably Kansas, Colorado and Utah. Although moderate-to-strong La Nina conditions were present in the equatorial Pacific the winter was unique for the above average rain and snowfall in the Southwest, where La Nina typically brings drier-than-average conditions.

  • During January alone, 170 inches (14 feet) of snow fell at the Alta ski area near Salt Lake City, Utah, more than twice the normal amount for the month, eclipsing the previous record of 168 inches that fell in 1967. At the end of February, seasonal precipitation for the 2008 Water Year, which began on October 1, 2007, was well above average over much of the West.

  • Mountain snowpack exceeded 150 percent of average in large parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Oregon at the end of February. Spring run-off from the above average snowpack in the West is expected to be beneficial in drought plagued areas.

  • Record February precipitation in the Northeast helped make the winter the fifth wettest on record for the region. New York had its wettest winter, while Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Vermont, and Colorado to the West, had their second wettest.

  • Snowfall was above normal in northern New England, where some locations posted all-time record winter snow totals. Concord, N.H., received 100.1 inches, which was 22.1 inches above the previous record set during the winter of 1886-87. Burlington, Vt., received 103.2 inches, which was 6.3 inches above the previous record set during the winter of 1970-71.

  • While some areas of the Southeast were wetter than average during the winter, overall precipitation for the region was near average. At the end of February, two-thirds of the Southeast remained in some stage of drought, with more than 25 percent in extreme-to- exceptional drought.

  • Drought conditions intensified in Texas with areas experiencing drought almost doubling from 25 percent at the end of January to 45 percent at the end of February.

  • The combined global land and ocean surface temperature was the 16th warmest on record for the December 2007-February 2008 period (0.58 (F) above the 20th century mean of 53.8 (F)). The presence of a moderate-to-strong La Nina contributed to an average temperature that was the coolest since the La Nina episode of 2000-2001.

  • While analyses of the causes of the severe winter storms in southern China continues, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory scientists are focusing on the presence of unusually strong, persistent high pressure over Eastern Europe, combined with low pressure over Southwest Asia. This pattern directed a series of storms across the region, while northerly low level flow introduced cold air from Mongolia. Unusually high water temperatures in the China Sea may have triggered available moisture that enhanced the severity of these storms.

  • Record Northern Hemisphere snow cover extent in January was followed by above average snow cover for the month of February. Unusually high temperatures across much of the mid- and high-latitude areas of the Northern Hemisphere in February began reducing the snow cover, and by the end of February, snow cover extent was below average in many parts of the hemisphere.

  • While there has been little trend in snow cover extent during the winter season since records began in the late 1960s, spring snow cover extent has been sharply lower in the past two decades as global temperatures have increased.

  • February was 61st warmest in the contiguous U.S. and 15th warmest globally on record. For the U.S., the temperature was near average, 0.2 (F) above the 20th century average of 34.7 (F), which was 2.0 (F) 2armer than February 2007.

  • Globally, the February average temperature was 0.68 (F) above the 20th century mean of 53.8 (F).


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