Alaska sets record high December temperature of
19.4C
The island community of Kodiak set the record on
Sunday and scientists fear the population will be deluged with rain as climate
warms
Reuters
Wed 29 Dec
2021 03.55 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/29/alaska-sets-record-high-december-temperature-of-194c
An unusual
winter warm spell in Alaska has brought daytime temperatures soaring past 15.5C
(60F) and torrents of rain at a time of year normally associated with bitter
cold and snow.
At the
island community of Kodiak, the air temperature at a tidal gauge hit 19.4C
(67F) degrees on Sunday, the highest December reading ever recorded in Alaska,
said scientist Rick Thoman of the Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and
Policy. He called it “absurd.”
The new
benchmark high came amid a spate of balmy December extremes, Thoman said,
including 18.3C (65F) at the Kodiak airport, a record 16.6C (62F) at the Alaska
Peninsula community of Cold Bay and at least eight December days of
temperatures above 10C (50F) at the Aleutian town of Unalaska, including a
reading of 13.3C (56F) that was Alaska’s warmest Christmas Day on record.
The most
serious immediate implication for humans is likely from the massive amounts of
precipitation dumped on interior Alaska, where the Fairbanks area was hit by
its fiercest mid-winter storm since 1937, Thoman said.
Normally,
December is a dry month in interior Alaska because the usually frigid air
cannot hold much moisture. Whatever moisture does flow in tends to be “the more
fluffy powder because the air is nice and cold”, said Thoman, who lives in
Fairbanks.
But so much
snow fell that on Sunday it caved in the roof of the sole grocery store in
Delta Junction, a town 95 miles (153km) south-east of Fairbanks.
Possibly
worse, the heavy snows were followed by torrents of rain that coated
communities in the region with ice, triggering widespread power outages and
prompting closures of major roads and offices, as well as a nickname:
Icemageddon.
The Alaska
Department for Transportation warned that roads will remain treacherous for a
long time because of the cement-like ice coating that has formed on them.
“Ice is
extremely difficult to remove once it has binded to the road surface. Even
though air temps were warm during ‘icemageddon2021’, roads were at sub-zero
temps, which caused ice to bind to the surface,” the department said on
Twitter.
The blasts
of warm and wet mid-winter weather have become more frequent in Alaska over the
past two decades than in years prior, a sign of climate change, Thoman said.
“This is exactly what we expect in a warming world,” he said.
The story
is similar elsewhere in the far north, where winter rains have proved
treacherous to people and to grazing animals, like caribou and musk oxen, that
struggle when ice on the ground covers food sources. Such hardships are
expected to intensify.
A study
published last month in the journal Nature Communications projected an Arctic
climate with more winter rain than snow starting around 2060 or 2070.
Alaska will
still have its winter cold – Fairbanks temperatures were forecast to plunge
below minus -29C (-20F) this weekend – but warm, soggy episodes are expected to
be more numerous in the future, Thoman said.
“A warming,
moistening world has put our thumbs on the scale to make this more likely,” he
added.
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