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Recording the warmest January on record allowed Americans to save on their heating,
but like all good things, last month's mildness seems to have been too good to
last.
The country's average temperature for the month was 39.5 degrees Fahrenheit,
8.5 degrees above average for January, the National Climatic Data Center said
Tuesday. The old record for January warmth was 37.3 degrees set in 1953.
On the other hand, while much of the United States was basking in warm weather,
parts of Europe and Asia were being battered by bitter cold. Climate details
for the rest of the world for January are expected to be available next week.
During the month the jet stream, a strong high-altitude wind that guides weather
fronts from west to east, stayed unusually far to the north, keeping the coldest
air in Canada and Alaska, the agency said.
Keeping that cold air to the north allowed mild Pacific air to moderate temperatures
across the contiguous states, leading to the warm conditions.
However, the jet stream is now sliding into a more typical winter pattern,
according to the Climate Prediction Center. The February outlook calls for below-normal
temperatures in the mid-Atlantic, the Southeast and intermountain West, and
above-normal temperatures in the Southwest, the northern Plains and Alaska.
Both centers are part of the government's National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
The records go back to 1895 when detailed climate records began being collected.
During January, none of the 48 contiguous states had below-average temperatures
_ and 15 states in the northern Plains, Great Lakes and Midwest had record high
temperatures for the month.
More than 74 percent of the country was classified as "much above normal"
when compared to the 1961-1990 climate normal. The Climate Data Center said
that only twice since 1895 has more than 74 percent of the nation had a much
above-normal temperature _ March 1910 and November 1999.
The record high temperatures helped reduce residential energy needs for the
nation as a whole, NCDC reported. NOAA's Residential Energy Demand Temperature
Index, which related energy use to climate, was at its lowest January value
on record. NOAA scientists estimated the nation's residential energy demand
was 20 percent less than would have occurred under average climate conditions.
Among the locations recording the warmest January on record were Bismarck,
N.D.; Wichita, Kan.; Blacksburg, Va.; and Rochester, Minn. For the Twin Cities
in Minnesota, it was only the second January since 1891 in which the mercury
did not dip below zero.
By state, it was the warmest January on record for Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Wisconsin. It was the second warmest January
in New York, Kentucky and Wyoming.
On the other hand, north of the jet stream, temperatures across Alaska were
much-below average. Fairbanks reached a minimum temperature of -51 F Jan. 27,
with a high of only -40 F for that day.
NASA scientists recently reported that 2005 had edged out 1998 as the
warmest year on record worldwide. NOAA researchers, however, said their analysis
placed the two years in a statistical dead heat.