Menu Bar

Home           Calendar           Topics          Just Charlestown          About Us

Friday, July 10, 2020

NOAA says June was one of the hottest, driest in US history

Nation also saw 10 billion-dollar disasters in first six months of this year
An annotated map of the United States showing notable climate and weather events that occurred across the country during June 2020. For details, please visit http://bit.ly/USClimate202006.

Hot temperatures and below-normal rainfall put June 2020 among the warmest and driest Junes in the 126-year U.S. climate record.

In addition, the first half of 2020 brought 10 billion-dollar weather disasters. This makes 2020 the sixth consecutive calendar year where 10 or more billion-dollar weather events occurred — a new record, according to experts from NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information.

Here’s a climate snapshot of the month of June and the year to date:


Climate by the numbers, June 2020

The average June temperature across the contiguous U.S. was 70.3 degrees F (1.8 degrees above average), ranking it in the warmest third in the 126-year record. Above-average temperatures were observed across portions of the West and Gulf coasts, the Southwest, Northern Plains and from the Great Lakes to New England.   
The average precipitation for June was 2.72 inches (0.21 of an inch below average), which ranked in the driest third of the record. Despite the dry conditions, some locations did see above-average precipitation, including parts of the Pacific Northwest, Rockies and Great Lakes. Idaho had its 13th-wettest June on record.


Year to date (YTD) | January through June 2020

The year-to-date average temperature for the contiguous U.S. was 50.0°F, which is 2.4°F above the 20th-century average and the eighth warmest YTD on record. Meanwhile, Florida sweltered through its hottest YTD on record.

Despite June’s arid conditions, the YTD precipitation total was 16.32 inches, 1.01 inches above average. It ranked in the wettest third of the 126-year record. 

Tennessee had its wettest YTD on record; North Carolina had its fourth wettest.

Billion-dollar disasters, so far

A map of the United States plotted with 10 billion-dollar weather and climate disasters that occurred from January through June, 30, 2020. The events were largely related to severe weather. Download this map image and read the summary at www.ncei.noaa.gov/billions.
Through the end of June 2020, the U.S. experienced 10 weather and climate disasters that caused 80 deaths and incurred losses exceeding $1 billion each. All 10 events were due to severe storms that occurred across more than 30 states, from the Great Lakes to the Gulf Coast.

This year is the sixth-consecutive year with at least 10 separate billion-dollar disasters to date. 2020 also tied with 2011 and 2016 for having 10 disasters within the first six months of the year, just trailing the record set in 2017 (11 events by end of June).

An annotated map of the United States showing notable climate and weather events that occurred across the country during June 2020. For details, please visit http://bit.ly/USClimate202006.

More notable climate events