We are now in the middle of a heatwave period in which some locations have broken daily temperature records (records for a specific day)
Let me describe what is happening and why.
Below are the high temperatures yesterday (Sunday, July 7). 70s along the coast and over the marine areas of NW Washington. Lower 90s in Puget Sound, around 100F in Portland, and low 100s over the Columbia Basin.
Why so warm?
We start with being near the time of maximum sun strength and length of day. Temperatures can warm until 5-6 PM this time of the year.
But the real secret is the position of high pressure aloft, positioned today and yesterday in the "sweet spot" for Northwest warmth--over southwestern BC. The map below shows the upper level (500 hPa) map today, with the shading showing the difference of the values from normal (orange and red are above normal). Perfect for local warnth.
And yes, there is global warming. You can give credit for about 2F of the heat to increasing greenhouse gases. For example, a location that reached 93F yesterday, would have been 91F.
We still would have had a heatwave without global warming.
So what about the future?
The Seattle Times is up to its old tricks and stating that a "100 Degree Heat Wave" looms for Puget Sound (see front page clip today) and "among the warmest nights in history." Scary stuff.
And not true.
Let's look at the surface air temperature predictions from the very high-resolution UW forecast model near the time of max temperatures (5 PM)
At 5 PM, most of Puget Sound country is in the upper 80s and lower 90s, but warmer around Portland, and MUCH warmer (over 100F) at the lower elevation of the Columbia Basin.
Tomorrow is much of the same story west of the Cascade crest, except a few degrees warmer south and southeast of Puget Sound.
Sorry, Seattle Times....no century temperatures predicted near Puget Sound. But much warmer around the Columbia Basin...over 104F in many places.
But what about Wednesday? Much cooler in the west, and even eastern Washington starts pulling back.
Why cooling? Because the upper level ridge weakens and moves eastward and an upper trough of low pressure moves in (see upper level map for Wednesday). Marine air starts to push into western WA.
But there is a danger in this change.
As cool air and high pressure build into western Washington, it will produce strong winds over the eastern slopes of the Cascades (see wind forecast for late Wednesday). Reds, grays, and greens indicate stronger winds.
Winds that can rev up and wildfires.
Finally, what about the Seattle Times claims about us experiencing one of the warmest nights in history?
Just wrong.
Even at crazy warm SeaTac airport the low temperature last night was not even close to being a record (see below). The plot shows the highest minimum temperature each year and the red line is last night at SeaTac. Many years had warmer minima.
And using a far better station for climatological analysis (Olympia), last night's minimum was nothing unusual. Most years have had warmer minima.
Stay cool....There is no major heatwave predicted for the next week.