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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Global Cooling Alert: Anchorage facing "the coldest summer ever,"
2008-07-25
The coldest summer ever? You might be looking at it, weather folks say.
Must be caused by "Climate Change".
Is Al Gore in Anchorage right now?
Right now the so-called summer of '08 is on pace to produce the fewest days ever recorded in which the temperature in Anchorage managed to reach 65 degrees. That unhappy record was set in 1970, when we only made it to the 65-degree mark, which many Alaskans consider a nice temperature, 16 days out of 365.

This year, however -- with the summer more than half over -- there have been only seven 65-degree days so far. And that's with just a month of potential "balmy" days remaining and the forecast looking gloomy.

National Weather Service meteorologist Sam Albanese, a storm warning coordinator for Alaska, says the outlook is for Anchorage to remain cool and cloudy through the rest of July. "There's no real warm feature moving in," Albanese said. "And that's just been the pattern we've been stuck in for a couple weeks now."

In the Matanuska Valley on Wednesday snow dusted the Chugach. On the Kenai Peninsula, rain was raising Six-Mile River to flood levels and rafting trips had to be canceled.

So if the cold and drizzle are going to continue anyway, why not shoot for a record? The mark is well within reach, Albanese said: "It's probably going to go down as the summer with the least number of 65-degree days."

In terms of "coldest summer ever," however, a better measure might be the number of days Anchorage fails to even reach 60. There too, 2008 is a contender, having so far notched only 35 such days -- far below the summer-long average of 88.

Unless we get 10 more days of 60-degree or warmer temperatures, we're going to break the dismal 1971 record of only 46 such days, a possibility too awful to contemplate.

Still, according to a series of charts cobbled together Tuesday evening by a night-shift meteorologist in the weather service's Anchorage office, the current summer clearly has broken company with the record-setting warmth of recent years. Consider:

  • 70-degree days. So far this summer there have been two. Usually there are 15. Last year there were 21. In 2004 there were 49.

  • 75-degree days. So far this summer there've been zero. Usually there are four. It may be hard to remember, but last year there were 21. In 2004 there were 23.

    So are all bets off on global warming? Hardly, scientists say. Climate change is a function of long-term trends, not single summers or individual hurricanes. Last year the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded that it's "unequivocal" the world is warming, considering how 11 of the warmest years on record have occurred in the past 13 years.

    So what's going on in Alaska, which also posted a fairly frigid winter? Federal meteorologists trace a lot of the cool weather to ocean temperatures in the South Pacific. When the seas off the coast of Peru are 2 to 4 degrees cooler than normal, a La Nina weather pattern develops, which brings cooler-than- normal weather to Alaska.

    For most of the past year, La Nina (the opposite of El Nino, in which warmer-than-normal ocean temperatures occur off Peru) has prevailed. But that's now beginning to change. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Web site, water temperatures in the eastern South Pacific began to warm this summer -- and the weather should eventually follow.

    The current three-month outlook posted by the national Climate Prediction Center in Camp Springs, Md., calls for below-normal temperatures for the south coast of Alaska from August through October -- turning to above-normal temperatures from October through December.
  • Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

    #9  It has been colder than usual here. And drier too. Some global warming.
    Posted by: DarhVader   2008-07-25 21:29  

    #8  Rumors of my demise by extreme hypothermia are greatly exaggerated......
    Posted by: Alaska Paul with his Parka on   2008-07-25 20:18  

    #7  I live at the 1700 ft level in the mountains north of Anchorage. Typical night time temps are 38F to 42F, and daytime temps are in the 50s to low 60s. Snow on the 5500 foot level in the mountains Wednesday. Some global warming, heh.
    Posted by: Alaska Paul with his Parka on   2008-07-25 20:16  

    #6  come to think of it, Alaska Paul hasn't been posting much. Too frozen to type? We ask, you decide

    /Commodore Frank
    Posted by: Frank G   2008-07-25 19:26  

    #5  Are there still people who pretend to care about AGW? Over here (UK) the government finally realised that nobody believed a word of it, so they invented a couple of other scare stories instead: knife crime and childhood obesity. AGW is now buried next to flared trousers in the Remembrance Garden of Silly Ideas.
    Posted by: Daffy Crolurt8700   2008-07-25 18:35  

    #4  The Church of the Immaculate Global Warming sneers at all unbelievers.
    Posted by: Iblis   2008-07-25 15:58  

    #3  The climate prediction center's forecasts out to 14 days have Alaska with lower than normal temperatures.

    However, cool Alaska temperatures generally correlate with warmer than normal lower-48 temperatures.
    Posted by: mhw   2008-07-25 14:33  

    #2  Get Al Gore up there! STAT!
    Posted by: tu3031   2008-07-25 13:53  

    #1  It's the PDO. NH sea ice remains about 600,000 km**2 ahead of last year.
    Posted by: anymouse   2008-07-25 12:39  

    00:01