70 F. high in St. Cloud Monday.
63 F. average high on April 27.
43 F. high on April 27, 2014.
April 27 in Minnesota Weather History. Source: Twin Cities National Weather Service.
2002:
Heavy snow over the Twin Cities and central Minnesota. Chanhassen got
half a foot. Vivid lightning seen with the snow during the evening.
1996: Low of 9 degrees at Embarrass. Ice was still on some central and most northern Minnesota lakes.
1921: Late season blizzard at Hibbing. The temperature was 75 degrees three days before.
Situational Awareness
"Don't
push the weather" I remind my Navy son, ad nauseum. He flies
helicopters, which don't have weather radar on their multiple displays, I
was surprised to learn.
But there's no need to fly blind, not
with the proliferation of web sites and apps out there today, many of
them free. Why did Dauphin Island Regatta officials go forward with a
sailboat race as a line of storms approached on Saturday? I have no idea
and I won't second-guess. But these deadly storms strengthened over
Mobile Bay, Alabama, and this intense squall line showed up on hundreds
of radar apps available for iOS and Android.
Doppler in your
pocket is more than a convenience; it might even save your life. But
many days we're so anxious to get an event in or reach our destination
on time that we ignore the warning signs.
Clouds increase today
with an isolated shower; a better chance of thunder Friday with
potentially soaking showers and T-storms Saturday night into Sunday as a
sticky warm front approaches.
I do like the sound of that. Warm front.
According
to NOAA there's a 70 percent chance that El Nino will linger into the
summer. Odds favor a warmer, drier summer than recent years.
Place your bets.
* Screen shots above:
RadarScope (left image) and
Aeris Pulse (middle and right), which was created by developers at my company,
AerisWeather.
* More information on the aftermath of Alabama's Regatta disaster
here, courtesy of AL.com.
70% Chance of El Nino Lingering into Summer.
NOAA CPC
is also predicting a 60% chance of El Nino warming conditions spilling
over into autumn. Some of the models (above) show temperature anomalies
of 1.5 to 2.0C later in 2015.
Looks Like May.
Temperatures trend as much as 5-15F warmer than average into the first
half of next week, 60s giving way to 70s. An isolated shower can't be
ruled out later today, a slight thunder chance Friday. The best chance
of more widespread showers and T-storms comes late Saturday into Sunday
as a sticky warm front approaches. Remember those?
Accumulated Rainfall.
NOAA.s .25 degree GFS data shows flooding rains from the Gulf Coast
into Florida, another surge of heavy rain pushing into the Midwest and
Great Lakes Sunday and Monday, but the heaviest rainfall amounts are
forecast to stay south/east of Minnesota. Source: AerisWeather.
Warmer Than Average May?
With a strong El Nino continuing to strengthen there's evidence on the
weather maps of a warm bias from May into much of the summer. Long range
forecasting is always a hand-waving exercise, but there is a
correlation between substantive El Nino warming phases in the Pacific
and warm temperature anomalies downwind, over North America. 500 mb
forecast winds for the evening of May 11 courtesy of GrADS:COLA/IGES.
"Explosive" Wildfires Are Already Out of Control Months Before Fire Season. ThinkProgress has the latest; here's the intro: "
Wildfire
season” seems to be a thing of the past for drought-stricken
California, with fires now raging throughout the year. There have
already been nearly 850 wildfires this year — 70 percent above the
average, according
to CAL FIRE data. High temperatures and low precipitation, both related
to climate change, have dried out forests and scrublands across the
western United States, allowing fires to spread faster and farther than
usual, any time during the year..."
File photo credit above: "
In
this Saturday, April 18, 2015 photo provided by Daniel Cole, flames
burn in the Prado Dam Flood Control Basin adjacent to homes, foreground,
as seen from Corona, Calif. Cooperative weather and the efforts of
firefighters helped beat back flames Sunday that had threatened hundreds
of homes near the Southern California dam. Evacuation orders were
lifted just before dawn for about 300 homes in an area along the border
of the cities of Norco and Corona, about 35 miles southeast of downtown
Los Angeles." (Daniel Cole via AP).
Import Our Water From Wetter Climes? It's A Pipe Dream.
As California enters the 4th year of a debilitating drought some of the
proposed solutions are becoming more....creative. Here's an excerpt of
an Op-Ed at
The Los Angeles Times: "
If
it only were this simple: Build a pipeline to Seattle and solve
California's water problems. Better yet: Lay pipe to the Great Lakes. Or
sink pipe on the ocean floor and siphon water from Alaska. While we're
at it, tow an iceberg down from the Arctic. All these ideas and more
have been suggested over the decades. Let's get right to the point:
They're all nutty. Politically and financially unfeasible..." (photo courtesy of
WIRED.com).
Hurricanes of Terror: Why Two Names Were Dropped From Storm List. No, there will be no Hurricane Isis this year;
Live Science explains: "...
Two
hurricane names linked with terror and death were dropped from the
Pacific storm list, the United Nations' World Meteorological
Organization announced Friday (April 17). The first, "Isis," was booted
from the 2016 list of hurricane names
because of its association with the brutal Islamic State militant
group, the WMO said. Isis, the name of an ancient Egyptian goddess, was
replaced with "Ivette..." (Image of Hurricane Arthur: NASA).
A Rare and Devastating F5.
The photo above shows what was left of Rochester after the 1883 tornado
roared across the city, leaving 37 dead and over 200 injured.
Wikipedia has more details.
Seasonal Tornado Forecasts Could Soon Be A Reality, Researchers Say. Here's an excerpt of an interesting story at
The Oklahoman: "...
But
weather researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s National Severe Storms Laboratory and elsewhere are
working on a new method they hope will allow emergency responders to
prepare weeks ahead of time when tornadoes are likely. Harold Brooks,
senior research scientist at the Norman-based laboratory, said
scientists could be a few years away from being able to release seasonal
forecasts for tornadoes. Rather than predicting individual outbreaks,
those forecasts would predict how likely tornadoes were over the course
of a few weeks or an entire season, he said..."
Floods More Frequent in Midwest. Here's an excerpt from
The Gazette-Democrat: "...
The
findings likely come as no surprise to millions of people in the
Midwest and bordering states. During the past several decades, large
floods have plagued the region in 1993, 2008, 2011, 2013 and again in
2014. The floods have caused agricultural and economic losses in the
billions of dollars, displaced people and led to loss of life. “There is
a pattern with increasing frequency of flood events from North Dakota
south to Iowa and Missouri and east into Illinois, Indiana and Ohio,”
says Iman Mallakpour, a UI graduate student in civil and environmental
engineering and lead author on the paper..."
Why Your Next Home Might Be Battery-Powered.
At least part of the time, and that's the challenge: making sure
there's still a viable grid for the times when clean, renewable, solar
or wind power isn't available. Here's an excerpt from
The Washington Post: "...
Only
a few hundred U.S. homeowners — frustrated by their utility or seeking
to go green — have worked with a small corps of battery makers to reduce
their reliance on the national grid. But improving technology, falling
prices and backing from electric-car giant Tesla could soon make the
battery-powered home cheaper and easier than ever, challenging the
long-held utility model of dependence on outside energy — and
revolutionizing how America flicks on its lights..." (Photo credit: Fresh Energy).
Like Shale Oil, Solar Power Is Shaking Up Global Energy. Here's a snippet of an interesting article from
Reuters: "...
A
crash in the prices of photovoltaic panels and improved technology that
harnesses more power from the sun has placed solar on the cusp of a
global boom, analysts say, who compare its rise to shale oil.
"Just as shale extraction reconfigured oil and gas, no other technology
is closer to transforming power markets than distributed and utility
scale solar," said consultancy Wood Mackenzie, which has a focus on the
oil and gas industry. Oil major Exxon Mobil says that "solar capacity is expected to grow by more than 20 times from 2010 to 2040..." (Photo credit: Solar City).
Apple Won't Always Rule.
Just Look At IBM. I'm a fan of Apple, always will be, but how long can they sustain their run? Here's an excerpt from
The New York Times: "...
Now
it’s Apple’s world. Apple is the most widely held stock in American
mutual fund portfolios. IBM, the former undisputed heavyweight champion,
isn’t even in the running anymore. It ranks 62nd, according to a
Morningstar analysis performed at my request. IBM is still an important
company, but it is struggling. Investors judge it to be worth less than
one-quarter of Apple’s market value today. What happened to IBM — how it
became this small, in comparison with Apple — is worth remembering..."
The Full-Size Lego Car. Because some people have entirely too much free time. That said, it is pretty cool. Here's a clip from
kottke.org: "
Raul Oaida
built a full-sized car out of half-a-million Lego pieces that actually
drives. The 256-cylinder engine is powered by compressed air. Top speed
is 20 mph..."
TODAY: Clouds increase, stray shower possible. Winds: N 5-10. High: 66
TUESDAY NIGHT: Patchy clouds. Low: 45
WEDNESDAY: Sunnier and milder. High: 68
THURSDAY: Warm sunshine. Still amazing. Wake-up: 44. High: 67
FRIDAY: Unsettled, passing T-shower possible. Wake-up: 45. High: near 70
SATURDAY: Some sun, drier day of weekend. Wake-up: 51. High: 74
SUNDAY: Humid, scattered heavy T-showers. Wake-up: 56. High: 73
MONDAY: Gray, but drier and slightly cooler. Wake-up: 53. High: 68
Climate Stories...
Extreme Weather Already On The Increase Due To Climate Change, Study Says. Here's an excerpt from
The Guardian: "...
Extreme
heatwaves and heavy rain storms are already happening with increasing
regularity worldwide because of manmade climate change, according to new
research. Global warming over the last century means heat extremes that
previously only occurred once every 1,000 days are happening four to
five times more often, the study published in Nature Climate Change said.
It found that one in five extreme rain events experienced globally are a
result of the 0.85C global rise in temperatre since the Industrial
Revolution, as power plants, factories and cars continue to pump out
greenhouse gas emissions..."
New Study Links Weather Extremes to Global Warming. Here is additional perspective via Justin Gillis at
The New York Times: "
The moderate global warming
that has already occurred as a result of human emissions is responsible
for about 75 percent of daily heat extremes, and about 18 percent of
precipitation extremes, scientists reported Monday. Especially hot days
of a sort that occurred only once every 30 years or so before the
Industrial Revolution are now occurring every six or seven years, the
scientists found..."
* The paper referenced above is
here.
How The U.S. Plans To Combat Arctic Climate Change. Here's the intro to a story from
The Washington Post: "
The
United States and seven other Arctic nations vowed Friday to work
together to combat climate change at the top of the world and put aside
tensions over Ukraine and Russian military activities. As the United
States assumed chairmanship of the Arctic Council, a multinational group
formed to address environmental and economic issues, Secretary of State
John F. Kerry said that the Arctic is undergoing profound climate
change at an alarming pace that will affect northern coastal communities
and, eventually, the world..."
U.S. Takes Reins of Arctic Council Amid Geopolitical Tension, Rapid Warming. Andrew Freedman has the article for
Mashable; here's an excerpt: "...
The
Arctic is one of the most rapidly warming places on the planet, with
warming air and sea temperatures and melting ice rapidly transforming
places from Fairbanks, Alaska to Svalbard, Norway from a forbidden,
frozen landscape to a seasonally accessible area. Arctic sea ice has
declined precipitously in recent years, with September sea ice extent
falling 13% per decade since 1979. Projections show the Arctic Ocean is
likely to become seasonally sea-ice free sometime between the next few
years and 2050. Sea ice extent in March was the lowest on record for the
month..." (File image: Jeremy Potter, NOAA).
China Is Building A Great Wall of Trees to Fight Climate Change and the Encroaching Gobi Desert. Is it just me or is this the rough nationalistic, ultimately futile equivalent of sticking your finger in a dike?
Quartz has the story; here's a clip: "
China
is the world’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases, but it is also
engaged in a massive tree-planting program that has helped to offset
tropical deforestation, and suck some of the climate-changing carbon
dioxide out of the atmosphere.
Reforestation efforts in China, combined with regrowth on abandoned
farmland in Russia, have helped offset 81% of the loss in above-ground
biomass carbon lost to tropical deforestation since 2003, according to a
new study in the academic journal Nature Climate Change..."
Photo credit above: "China's other Great Wall." (Reuter/Aly Song)
Obama Finally Gets Angry At Climate Science Deniers And It's Hilarious. ThinkProgress has a review of President Obama's performance at the White House Correspondent's Gala; here's an excerpt: "...
But
this was not only Obama’s best “speech” on climate change to date, it
was delivered to the perfect audience — the DC elite and the panjandrums
of the media. The “not-so-intelligentsia” have been wildly underplaying
the story of the century for a long, long time. They should have called
“Bull–” on deniers a long time ago. Kudos to the President for finally
doing so."
* A YouTube clip of Saturday night's commentary is
here, courtesy of The Daily Conversation.
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