National Annual Temperature Ranking,
Year 2006
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here for high resolution version. Please credit “NOAA.”)
Jan. 9, 2007 — The 2006 average annual
temperature for the contiguous U.S. was the warmest on record and nearly
identical to the record set in 1998, according to scientists at the NOAA
National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C. Seven months in 2006 were
much warmer than average, including December, which ended as the fourth
warmest December since records began in 1895.
Based
on preliminary data, the 2006 annual average temperature was 55 degrees
F—2.2 degrees F (1.2 degrees C) above the 20th Century mean and 0.07 degrees
F (0.04 degrees C) warmer than 1998. NOAA originally estimated in mid-December
that the 2006 annual average temperature for the contiguous United States
would likely be 2 degrees F (1.1 degrees C) above the 20th Century mean,
which would have made 2006 the third warmest year on record, slightly cooler
than 1998 and 1934, according to preliminary data. Further analysis of
annual temperatures and an unusually warm December caused the change in
records.
These values were calculated using
a network of more than 1,200 U.S. Historical Climatology Network stations.
These data, primarily from rural stations, have been adjusted to remove
artificial effects resulting from factors such as urbanization and station
and instrument changes, which occurred during the period of record.
An improved data set being developed
at NCDC and scheduled for release in 2007 incorporates recent scientific
advances that better address uncertainties in the instrumental record.
Small changes in annual average temperatures will affect individual rankings.
Although undergoing final testing and development, this new data set also
shows 2006 and 1998 to be the two warmest years on record for the contiguous
U.S., but with 2006 slightly cooler than 1998.
The unusually warm temperatures during
much of the first half of the cold season (October-December) helped reduce
residential energy needs for the nation as a whole. Using the Residential
Energy Demand Temperature Index (REDTI—an index developed at NOAA to relate
energy usage to climate), NOAA scientists determined that the nation's
residential energy demand was approximately 13.5 percent lower than what
would have occurred under average climate conditions for the season.
After a cold start to December, the
persistence of spring-like temperatures in the eastern two-thirds of the
country during the final two to three weeks of 2006 made this the fourth
warmest December on record in the U.S., and helped bring the annual average
to record high levels. For example, the monthly average temperature in
Boston was 8 degrees F above average, and in Minneapolis-St Paul, the temperature
was 17 degrees F above average for the last three weeks of December. Even
in Denver, which had its third snowiest December on record and endured
a major blizzard that brought the city to a standstill during the holiday
travel season, the temperature for the month was 1.4 degrees F warmer than
the 1971-2000 average.
Five states had their warmest December
on record (Minnesota, New York, Connecticut, Vermont, New Hampshire) and
no state was colder than average in December.
The unusually warm start to this
winter reflected the rarity of Arctic outbreaks across the country as an
El Niño episode continued in the equatorial Pacific. A contributing
factor to the unusually warm temperatures throughout 2006 also is the long-term
warming trend, which has been linked to increases in greenhouse gases.
This has made warmer-than-average conditions more common in the U.S. and
other parts of the world. It is unclear how much of the recent anomalous
warmth was due to greenhouse-gas-induced warming and how much was due to
the El Niño-related circulation pattern. It is known that El Niño
is playing a major role in this winter's short-term warm period.
U.S. and global annual temperatures
are now approximately 1.0 degrees F warmer than at the start of the 20th
century, and the rate of warming has accelerated over the past 30 years,
increasing globally since the mid-1970s at a rate approximately three times
faster than the century-scale trend. The past nine years have all been
among the 25 warmest years on record for the contiguous U.S., a streak
which is unprecedented in the historical record.
National Annual Temperature Averages,
1895-2006
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here for high resolution version. Please credit “NOAA.”)
Relevant Web Sites
NOAA
2006 Annual Climate Review: U.S. Summary
NOAA National Climatic
Data Center
Media Contact:
John Leslie, NOAA
Satellite and Information Service, (301) 713-1265
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