The
Northeast joined much of the eastern half of the United States as one of the
few moderate temperature zones in 2014. (NASA)
By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI News staff
Last year was the hottest year on record for the planet, but it
wasn’t the hottest in Rhode Island and Massachusetts. For Rhode Island, the
average temperature in 2014 was 51 degrees, the 43rd highest on record.
Massachusetts had an average temperature of 47.7 degrees, 87th warmest since
1895.
New England joined much of the eastern half of the United States
as one of the few moderate temperature zones in 2014. The cooler temperatures
occurred during all four seasons. Meanwhile, Alaska, Arizona California and
Nevada had record warm years.
According to NASA climate expert James Hansen, there is
no specific explanation for the regional anomaly. He did note that warmingis happening faster at higher
altitudes, and decade comparisons continue to show rising temperatures for the
nation and planet.
Hansen and other scientists have noted that the cooler eastern
temperatures and warmer western ones occurred during a weak year for tropical
Pacific Ocean temperatures and a subsequent lower El Niño effect. If the El
Niño effect rises slightly this year, it’s expected to push global temperatures
higher.
According to scientists with the National Oceanic Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), the planet has warmed 1.4 degrees since record keeping
began in 1880. Most of the warming has occurred during the past three decades.
Because of this warming, more moisture is contained in the
atmosphere, according to climatologists. This added moisture intensifies
weather events, including snowstorms. Through Feb. 15, Boston had received
90 inches of snow — 87 inches in January and February. The average
winter snowfall for Boston is 44 inches.
On Jan. 27, Worcester, Mass., had its single snowiest day, with 32
inches. Providence compiled 51 inches of snow between Jan. 1 and Feb. 15.
The average snowfall during that period is 17.5 inches. The Jan. 27 blizzard
dumped 19 inches of snow across Rhode Island, the third-heaviest storm since
the Blizzard of 1978, which dumped 28.5 inches.
In 2014, precipitation was somewhat wetter than average across New
England. Massachusetts received 49.8 inches of precipitation, which is 102
percent of the normal level.
As the five-year anniversary of the March floods of 2010
approaches, it’s worth noting that the five wettest years in Rhode Island are
1983, 1972, 1979, 2005, and 2008; 1983 was the wettest year with 67.5 inches of
precipitation.
The top five warmest summers in Rhode Island were 2010, 1983,
2005, 1944 and 1943; 2010 was the warmest with an average temperature of 74
degrees.