East Coast Celebrates Christmas With Warmest Weather On Record

Guess whose 20 year old air conditioner stopped working in the middle of their Christmas eve party? And Santa didn’t bring me a new one. I guess I was naughty.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

It was just 10 months ago that Boston smashed its all time snowfall record, and the US was blanketed in freezing weather from west to east as the Polar Vortex unleashed cold air for the second year in a row. It was so cold, the GDP report for the winter period had to be double-seasonally adjusted as the sharp economic slowdown, which was blamed on the “harsh weather”, simply did not make sense otherwise.

Fast forward to today when according to AccuWeather, Christmas felt more like Memorial Day across much of the eastern United States as temperatures rose between 20 and 35 degrees above average and 5-15 degrees above previous record highs.

While unlikely that it was the hottest Christmas ever – temperature recordings only go so far – records were broken all along the Eastern Seaboard, from the Southeast to New England with some areas breaking their previous record high by more than 10 degrees F. Some records were broken from the 1800s.

The highs that occurred on Thursday are more typical of late spring and early summer.

More from AccuWeather:

“One of the most impressive records on Christmas Eve occurred in Burlington, Vermont, when the city set their all-time December high temperature,” AccuWeather Meteorologist Brian Lada said.

 

Burlington rose to 68 F on Christmas Eve, 17 degrees higher than the previous record of 51 F set in 1957. The all-time warmest day prior to Thursday in Burlington was on Dec. 7, 1998 and Dec. 5, 1941 when it reached 67 F.

 

As a result of the warm weather, the entire Northeast was left without a white Christmas. The only location which saw at least an inch of snow accumulation on the ground on Christmas was across northern Maine. “Records also fell all along the Interstate 95 corridor from Boston through Washington, D.C.,” Lada said.

 

High temperatures rose into the 70s on Christmas Eve along the Interstate 95 corridor from New York City to Washington, D.C. Boston was 1 degree shy of reaching the 70-degree mark.

The warmth is expected to continue, and will lead to this December being the warmest on record across many Eastern cities. Through Christmas Eve, temperatures are more than 10 degrees above normal for the month across much of the Ohio Valley and Northeast.

Following a modest cooldown on Saturday, a push of milder air will build across the East on Sunday and will cause cities to challenge records yet again.  “New York City and Baltimore are some of the cities that could break records yet again on Sunday before a cold front washes away the warmth,” Lada said.

Just as last year’s unprecedented cold had a specific catalyst, namely an abnormally active Polar Vortex, so this year’s record hot weather is due to two things. As explained last week, typically this time of year, Arctic Oscillation would bring cold air to the Eastern U.S., bringing temperatures down. But so far this year, the oscillation has stayed much farther north, allowing warm air from the south to fill the void.

The other factor is El Niño, a periodic climate cycle in which sea surface temperatures over the eastern Pacific become warmer than usual. The effects from changes in Arctic Oscillations generally last only a few weeks, but the balmy weather in the Northeast could continue because of the El Niño effect, experts say.

We’ll leave the discussion of whether the weather anomalies of the past three years are due to global warming, or “climate change”, as it is now known, to others, but we will ask: if the past two years saw GDP boosted by 1.5% on average in the winter as a result of abnormally cold weather, does that mean that the US economy, which according to the Atlanta Fed was “growing” at 1.3% net of the record heat, is already in a recession?

 

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19 Comments
DDearborn
DDearborn
December 25, 2015 11:19 am

Hmmm

Given we have a couple hundred years worth of semi-reliable data in the face of a planet that is billions of years old these temperature variations at least in terms of the large longer term global perspective mean essentially nothing……………………

kokoda
kokoda
December 25, 2015 11:37 am

Suggest you all go to weatherbell.com and listen to Joe Bastardi’s latest weekly report (upper right of page – click on the link above the graphic, not the graphic).

Homer
Homer
December 25, 2015 12:11 pm

WOW! The East Coast is having a tropical heat wave. ‘Global Warming’??? Errr, let’s get that politically correct, ‘Climate Change’. hahaha! What do they think we are stoopid or something.

Last night it was 15 degrees outside. Now the Sun came out and it’s 32 degrees outside. HEY! Maybe ‘Global Warming’ is real.

Merry Christmas, all you bloggers.

A final note! Merry Christmas, I note, is coming back into favor, hmmmm! When anyone wishes me a ‘Happy Holiday’, I always ask, “Which Holiday do you mean?” I watch them as they stammer, trying to avoid saying ‘Merry Christmas’. But, Holiday has within it ‘Holy Day’.

OldeVirginian
OldeVirginian
December 25, 2015 12:19 pm

Merry Christmas from Chemtrail Airlines.

Don’t worry – by the time time they get done cooking our planet it will get a LOT hotter than this. Best pack your lead lined longjohns.

Homer
Homer
December 25, 2015 12:19 pm

I just shoveled snow 4 times yesterday and am going to shovel snow 2 more times today. A ‘White Christmas’ is over rated.

OldeVirginian
OldeVirginian
December 25, 2015 12:22 pm

PS Admin I feel for you. Our central AC crapped out a few weeks back and we decided to wait until spring to address. Sumer is y-cummen in now evidently. Mrs Santa didnt calculate a compressor into the holiday budget at my house either.

Homer
Homer
December 25, 2015 12:33 pm

Admin–I wear shorts everyday. What do you do? Go Commando all the other days?

Homer
Homer
December 25, 2015 1:09 pm

Admin–I would wait, but the storms lasted 3 or 4 days and the driveways and walkway are used and have to be cleaned. Who wants to struggle thru a foot and half or two of snow? I also, as a charitable act, remove the berms on my neighbors driveways, they are gone for Christmas, before it crystallizes into rock hard ice.

I’m looking at the neighbor’s berm and it come up to my chin and I’m not Billy Barty. Gasp! A lot of work. No good deed goes unpunished.

Homer
Homer
December 25, 2015 1:54 pm

Admin–There are a lot of places in the US that gets snow, a lot of snow. Unlike Philly that gets 6 in of snow and it make the national news. We can get 3 feet in 24 hrs and it doesn’t get a peep on national news. Of course, everyone knows about Buffalo with their lake effect snow, of course, that’s where crazy people live.

North Pole, No.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
December 25, 2015 1:56 pm

Admin, the good news is that finding a good AC repairman in winter is usually pretty easy. I thought things were strange here when we still had tomatoes ripening on the vine the first week of November but you win!

Homer
Homer
December 25, 2015 2:14 pm

IndenturedServant–I love vine ripened tomatoes. Where I am we have one week of spring and one week of fall. I ‘ve tried to grow tomatoes in the summer, but by the time they ripen, it’s so cold that they all pack up and move to Florida for the winter. hahaha!

SSS
SSS
December 25, 2015 4:41 pm

Actual photo of SSS in Tucson AZ. F**k global warming.

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IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
December 25, 2015 5:16 pm

Homer, you need to build a hot house! Where do you live? Canada? Alaska?

Thinker
Thinker
December 30, 2015 8:22 pm

Sick of El Niño? You ain’t seen nothing yet, warns NASA
Elizabeth Chuck, NBC News 5:34 p.m. EST December 30, 2015
http://www.wcnc.com/story/weather/severe-weather/2015/12/30/sick-of-el-nio-you-aint-seen-nothing-yet-warns-nasa/78097924/

The El Niño currently wreaking havoc around the world is forecast to only worsen in 2016 — and NASA experts fear it could get as bad as the most destructive El Niño ever, NBC News reports.

A new satellite image of the weather system “bears a striking resemblance to one from December 1997” — the worst El Niño on record — which was blamed for extreme weather, including record rainfall in California and Peru, heat waves across Australia, and fires in Indonesia. The severe conditions resulted in an estimated 23,000 deaths in 1997 and 1998.

[imgcomment image[/img]

This year’s El Niño has already caused wild conditions for much of the United States. It contributed to the reasons why many Americans experienced a balmy Christmas Eve, with temperature peaking in the 70s in places along the East Coast, and is responsible for deadly storms and near-record flooding in the South and Midwest.

It also has been tied to the worst floods in five decades in South America.

But a Dec. 27 satellite image from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which measures sea surface heights, implies the worst of the droughts and flooding are still to come — a forecast that is troubling to humanitarian relief agencies.

“The El Niño weather system could leave tens of millions of people facing hunger, water shortages and disease next year if early action isn’t taken to prepare vulnerable people from its effects,” aid agency Oxfam International warned in a press release.

(see link for chart comparing NWS statistics from 1997 to 2015)

In Ethiopia, for example, the government estimates 10.2 million people will need humanitarian assistance next year due to a drought exacerbated by El Niño, Oxfam said. In Malawi, 2.8 million people are estimated to experience food shortages before March.

In the U.S., the biggest El Niño impacts are expected in early 2016, NASA said. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecasts “several months of relatively cool and wet conditions across the southern United States, and relatively warm and dry conditions over the northern United States,” NASA said.

Matt Sitkowski, a coordinating weather producer at The Weather Channel, told NBC News that El Niño could result in a “wetter and stormier California” for the next two to three months — which could be a boon for the drought-stricken state.

“The fear is some of these storms come and you get too much at once, which could lead to flooding concerns,” he added. “It doesn’t take much in parts of California.”

The East Coast could easily be affected, too. The 1997-1998 El Niño caused a crippling ice storm in New England and southeastern Canada.

El Niños are triggered when winds in the Pacific weaken or reverse direction, resulting in a warming of the ocean in the central and eastern Pacific, mainly along the Equator. Clouds and storms follow the warm water, altering jet stream paths and storm paths around the world.

They typically peak late in the year: The name “El Niño” was coined by Peruvian sailors, who were first to notice unseasonably warm water around Christmastime (El Niño is Spanish for “the boy,” or “Christ child”).

They occur naturally every two to seven years.