Hotter than average temps are set to hit the U.S. for the end of spring and all of summer, especially in western and central parts of the country.
May Forecast
Temperatures should be the highest above average from parts of the central and southern Rockies into the Plains states. This is a complete reversal from the cooler than average temperatures seen in these regions during mid-April. The Southeast and Pacific Northwest should have temperatures that are fairly close to average for the month.
The forecast for summer will trend somewhat hotter for many areas of the U.S. when compared to the initial outlook released a month ago. A hotter than average June through August is expected from the West Coast to the Plains, Midwest and Great Lakes.
One reason for this hotter than average forecast is La Niña, the periodic cooling of water in the eastern Pacific Ocean along the equator that influences weather patterns near the U.S. After reaching its peak in late fall, La Niña continues to weaken. And past summers in similar situations have been quite warm.
“Summers after first-year La Niña winters are typically unusually warm in the western U.S. and parts of the northern tier, with any below-normal temperatures typically confined to parts of the southeast U.S.,” said Todd Crawford, chief meteorologist with The Weather Company.
Four of the 15 summer-after-La-Niña analogs Crawford examined were among the 10 hottest summers on record in the U.S., including 2011 (third), 2006 (sixth) and 2018 (tied for seventh). Summer 2020 was the nation’s fourth-hottest summer dating to 1895.
Another significant factor in summer forecasting is how moist or dry the soil is. As of early April, over 47 percent of the contiguous U.S. was classified as in drought, according to the Drought Monitor analysis. Long-range forecasts from NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center called for the current drought to persist in parts of the West and Plains over the next three months.
Dry soil warms faster and thus heats the air above it more efficiently than moist soil, leading to hotter temperatures. Soil and vegetation in drought-ridden areas also provide less moisture to the air from evaporation and transpiration. This all can lead to a spring drought feeding on itself and worsening into the summer.
We have to look at the other side of the globe for one final factor cited by Crawford in this hot summer forecast. Long-term forecast guidance points to a continuation of an active thunderstorm pattern over the region of the Pacific Ocean near Indonesia. The influence of that activity on the large-scale atmosphere has historically been correlated with hot summers in the U.S.
A final component to this forecast is climate change. A study by Climate Central found the nation’s summer temperatures warmed by about 2 degrees from 1970 through 2018.
“Cooling demand has increased about 20% in the past 60 years,” said Crawford, referring to the metric of electricity demand for cooling known as population-weighted cooling degree days. The combination of a fading La Niña, the drought, warm climate model forecasts, and the long-term trend all argue for a hot summer ahead.
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