Current:Home > reviewsThe U.S. in July set a new record for overnight warmth -Secure Horizon Growth
The U.S. in July set a new record for overnight warmth
View
Date:2025-04-11 21:53:34
Talk about hot nights, America got some for the history books last month.
The continental United States in July set a record for overnight warmth, providing little relief from the day's sizzling heat for people, animals, plants and the electric grid, meteorologists said.
The average low temperature for the lower 48 states in July was 63.6 degrees (17.6 Celsius), which beat the previous record set in 2011 by a few hundredths of a degree. The mark is not only the hottest nightly average for July, but for any month in 128 years of record keeping, said National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration climatologist Karin Gleason. July's nighttime low was more than 3 degrees (1.7 Celsius) warmer than the 20th century average.
Scientists have long talked about nighttime temperatures — reflected in increasingly hotter minimum readings that usually occur after sunset and before sunrise — being crucial to health.
"When you have daytime temperatures that are at or near record high temperatures and you don't have that recovery overnight with temperatures cooling off, it does place a lot of stress on plants, on animals and on humans," Gleason said Friday. "It's a big deal."
In Texas, where the monthly daytime average high was over 100 degrees (37.8 Celsius) for the first time in July and the electrical grid was stressed, the average nighttime temperature was a still toasty 74.3 degrees (23.5 Celsius) — 4 degrees (2.2 Celsius) above the 20th century average.
In the past 30 years, the nighttime low in the U.S. has warmed on average about 2.1 degrees (1.2 Celsius), while daytime high temperatures have gone up 1.9 degrees (1.1 Celsius) at the same time. For decades climate scientists have said global warming from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas would make the world warm faster at night and in the northern polar regions. A study earlier this week said the Arctic is now warming four times faster than the rest of the globe.
Nighttime warms faster because daytime warming helps make the air hold more moisture then that moisture helps trap the heat in at night, Gleason said.
"So it is in theory expected and it's also something we're seeing happen in the data," Gleason said.
NOAA on Friday also released its global temperature data for July, showing it was on average the sixth hottest month on record with an average temperature of 61.97 degrees (16.67 degrees Celsius), which is 1.57 degrees (0.87 degrees Celsius) warmer than the 20th century average. It was a month of heat waves, including the United Kingdom breaking its all-time heat record.
"Global warming is continuing on pace," Colorado meteorologist Bob Henson said.
veryGood! (1812)
Related
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- There's a spike in respiratory illness among children — and it's not just COVID
- How Life Will Change for Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis After the Coronation
- Red Cross Turns to Climate Attribution Science to Prepare for Disasters Ahead
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- With Order to Keep Gas in Leaking Facility, Regulators Anger Porter Ranch Residents
- 24 Mother’s Day Gifts From Amazon That Look Way More Expensive Than They Actually Are
- 15 Practical Mother's Day Gifts She'll Actually Use
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Former Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich testifies in documents investigation. Here's what we know about his testimony
Ranking
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- How Teddi Mellencamp's Cancer Journey Pushed Her to Be Vulnerable With Her Kids
- Hospitals have specialists on call for lots of diseases — but not addiction. Why not?
- 8 Answers to the Judge’s Climate Change Questions in Cities vs. Fossil Fuels Case
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- CNN chief executive Chris Licht has stepped down
- Colonoscopies save lives. Doctors push back against European study that casts doubt
- We Bet You Don't Know These Stars' Real Names
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
What to do during an air quality alert: Expert advice on how to protect yourself from wildfire smoke
Eyeballs and AI power the research into how falsehoods travel online
See it in photos: Smoke from Canadian wildfires engulfs NYC in hazy blanket
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
66 clinics stopped providing abortions in the 100 days since Roe fell
Prince Harry Absent From Royal Family Balcony Moment at King Charles III’s Coronation
IVF Has Come A Long Way, But Many Don't Have Access