Final numbers will become available in a few days, but it is likely that 2024 will be the warmest year on record globally. I'm not sure if the difference from 2023 will be statistically significant, but that doesn't really change the story of long-term warming.
With an average temperature of 57.4F, it was also the warmest year on record in the Salt Lake City area based on observations collected by the National Weather Service, and by a pretty wide margin.
Source: https://xmacis.rcc-acis.org/ |
If fact, it beat the previous record holder, 2012, by 0.8F. Given the inevitable grousing about the representativeness of the airport site, I'll also add that this was also the warmest year on record at the Bountiful Bench site, which has continuous records back to 1975.
That site observed an average temperature of 55.0F, topping the previous record holder, 2012, by 0.6F.
Precipitation for the year at the airport was 14.78" which was just a skiff below normal (15.52"). Snowfall for the year was 26.2" which was about half of average (51.9"). I have not had a chance to carefully break that down to see if that was due to dry cool months or a greater fraction of cool-month precipitation falling as rain, but a quick look at the graphs suggests the latter dominated.
As an anecdote, we have now made it roughly through my 2024/25 "snow blowing season", that period during which I normally blow out my south-facing driveway after storms since the sun is too low to melt it out in a short period of time. I haven't run the snow blower once. It's sitting in the garage collecting dust. Nothing that has fallen on our driveway or sidewalk has survived for more than a few hours.
What’s the status regarding “Steenburgh winter”?
ReplyDelete100” base by January 1st or something along those lines
DeleteNeed to get to 100" by Feb 10. Still a ways to go.
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