86 F. high temperature at MSP International Airport Wednesday.
81 F. average high on August 17.
74 F. high on August 17, 2015.
August 18, 1953: Four heifers near St. Martin were lucky; a tornado picked them up and set them back down again, unharmed.
Can you predict where the stock market or interest rates will be the second week of February, 2017? If so I have a weather forecast I’d like to sell you. The Old Farmer’s Almanac is predicting a harsh, snowy winter for Minnesota and the Midwest.
Louisiana Flooding Leaves 11 Dead, Forces Thousands From Their Homes. Here’s an excerpt of an update from The Washington Post: “The waters and the death toll continued to rise Tuesday in rain-battered Louisiana, as flooding of historic levels swept anew into some communities and stubbornly lingered in hundreds more. The scope of the disaster was unprecedented, officials said. At least 40,000 homes had been damaged, Louisiana’s governor said, and 11 people have been killed since two feet of rain began falling Thursday night. More than 10,000 people were in shelters, miles of roads remained impassable, the start of the school year was canceled and first responders began the grim work of door-to-door inspections to check for drowning victims...”
Why The Deadly Louisiana Flood Occurred. The fact that there was no named tropical system probably added to the overall lack of preparation for this level of historic flooding. No-name tropical disturbances that stall for extended periods of time can be even more damaging (from an inland flooding perspective) as Category 5 hurricanes. Here’s an excerpt at Scientific American: “…The Louisiana storm was a freak event driven by the atmosphere and the ocean. At present, scientists do not know enough to attribute dynamic storms of this sort to climate change. But broaden the focus a little, and some links appear. The frequency and intensity of heavy rainfall events have increased globally, said Kenneth Kunkel, a climate scientist at NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information. “Each decade, it has been higher than the previous decade, for about the last 30 to 40 years,” he said. Both the land and the oceans have been warming up, which has increased the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere, he said…”
U.S. Losses from Hurricanes Set To Soar By 2100. Thinking of retiring on the coast? Might I suggest a nice rental at VRBO.com. Here’s an excerpt from Thomson Reuters Foundation: “The annual cost of damage caused by hurricanes in the United States may rise eight times by the end of the century, as the number and intensity of the storms increase on a warmer planet, researchers said on Tuesday. Globally, tropical cyclones account for more than 50 percent of economic losses caused by weather. Their impact is projected to increase “substantially” as the number of people affected grows, incomes rise and storms worsen, the researchers said. In the United States, the increase in the cost of hurricanes may even outpace economic growth if climate change is not curbed, the Germany-based Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) said in a paper…”
File photo: “In this file photo, neighborhoods are flooded with oil and water two weeks after Hurricane Katrina went though New Orleans, September 12, 2005.” REUTERS/Carlos Barria.
July Was “Absolutely” Earth’s Hottest Month Ever Recorded. Capital Weather Gang reports: “NASA data reveal the Earth’s temperature reached its highest point in 136 years of record-keeping during July. “July 2016 was absolutely the hottest month since the instrumental records began,” tweeted Gavin Schmidt, who directs NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, which is responsible for temperature measurements. It was the 10th-straight month of record-breaking temperatures in NASA’s analysis, a substantial 0.18 degrees (0.1 Celsius) warmer than the previous hottest July in 2011. “It’s a little alarming to me that we’re going through these records like nothing this year,” said Jason Furtado, a professor of meteorology at the University of Oklahoma…”
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Louisiana’s Sinking Coast is a $100 Billion Nightmare for Big Oil. Rising seas, land subsidence – significant infrastructure is threatened in the years to come, according to Bloomberg: “From 5,000 feet up, it’s difficult to make out where Louisiana’s coastline used to be. But follow the skeletal remains of decades-old oil canals, and you get an idea. Once, these lanes sliced through thick marshland, clearing a path for pipelines or ships. Now they’re surrounded by open water, green borders still visible as the sea swallows up the shore. The canals tell a story about the industry’s ubiquity in Louisiana history, but they also signal a grave future: $100 billion of energy infrastructure threatened by rising sea levels and erosion. As the coastline recedes, tangles of pipeline are exposed to corrosive seawater; refineries, tank farms and ports are at risk…”
Photo credit: “A restoration site for eroded wetlands near the town of Pointe Aux Chenes, an unincorporated community located in south Terrebonne Parish.” Photographer: William Widmer/Redux.
It’s the Dawn of the Community Solar Farm. Here’s a clip from Bloomberg Markets: “It’s like rooftop solar, without the rooftops. A growing number of consumers are buying into community solar farms that allow renters and apartment dwellers to access renewable energy produced on neighborhood plots that can be small enough to host a little league baseball game. Some are so modest they’re referred to as “solar gardens.” Conventional solar farms such as Berkshire Hathaway Inc.’s 550-megawatt Topaz plant in California can spread over hundreds or thousands of acres. They sell their electricity mainly to utilities through long-term contracts. Rooftop panels, meanwhile, are mainly available for private homes, and can only work on about 30 percent of U.S. houses. Community farms offer a middle road...” (Photo: Wikipedia)
Shorter-Range Electric Cars Meet the Needs of Almost All U.S. Drivers. Here’s a clip at Ars Technica: “The vast majority of American drivers could switch to battery electric vehicles (BEVs) tomorrow and carry on with their lives unaffected, according to a new study in Nature Energy. What’s more, those BEVs need not be a $100,000 Tesla, either. That’s the conclusion from a team at MIT and the Santa Fe Institute in New Mexico that looked at the potential for BEV adoption in the US in light of current driving patterns. Perhaps most interestingly, the study found that claim to be true for a wide range of cities with very distinct geography and even per-capita gasoline consumption…” (Photo credit: Nissan).
* The paper referenced in the Ars Technica article above is here.
What’s The Future of Nuclear in the Midwest? A State-by-State Look. Call me crazy but if we want to lower CO2 levels quickly we will need some level of nuclear power, until clean renewables are at scale, which is going to take more time, in spite of great technology, tumbling prices and consumer demand. Here’s an excerpt from a story at Midwest Energy News: “…Minnesota, also a regulated state, has two nuclear plants, Prairie Island and Monticello. Both are owned by Xcel Energy and they provide about 30 percent of the energy for Xcel’s upper Midwest customers, not all of them in Minnesota. Minnesota also has a moratorium on new nuclear plants, but some have pushed to lift it, specifically to build another unit at Monticello. Xcel Energy has said it could close Prairie Island before its license expires in 2033/2034, because of increased expenditures required to make upgrades required in response to the Fukushima Daiichi disaster, and other federal requirements…” (Photo credit: The Byron nuclear plant in Illinois.)
A Visual Guide to How Terribly the World’s Best Human Athletes Fare Versus Most Average Animals. We’re not as impressive as we think we are. Here’s an excerpt from Atlas Obscura: “…But the world’s most extraordinary human runner would not beat, say, an ordinary warthog. A warthog can run around 30 miles per hour on an average day—no training, no audience, no special wind conditions. Housecats also regularly reach this speed, as do grizzly bears, rabbits, and white-tailed deer. The roadrunner can run 25 mph even though it can also fly. A certain class of butterflies, called skippers, can get up to 37. The Olympics may have us all misty-eyed at the heights (and lengths, and speeds, and depths) of human achievement. But if we were ever to open the stadium gates to the whole animal kingdom, we’d quickly be put back in our place…”
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For beer lovers, Starkenberger’s Castle is one of only a few places in the world where they can truly, literally, immerse themselves in beer. As such it is a obviously a desirable travel destination. So why have no Atlas users bathed in the hoppy aroma of “world’s only beer-swimming-pools?” These 13-foot pools, each containing 42,000 pints of warm beer (with some water) are the most unique attraction at the beer-themed castle—and not just a gimmick. The beer is rich in vitamins and calcium, and it is said that sitting in it is good for the skin and helps cure open wounds and psoriasis…”
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The Foodnited States of America, features all 50 states. The project came about when Foodiggity founder Chris Durso’s young son suggested they make states out of food...” (Image credit: food diggity).
If you had to assign one piece of food to represent each state, which item would you pick? For the good people at Foodiggity, the answer is whatever is punniest. Armed with a set of state-shaped cookie cutters and a love of wordplay, the team set out to make each state out of a food. The series, calledTODAY: Some sticky sun, watch for severe storms late. Winds: S 8-13. High: 88
THURSDAY NIGHT: Few heavy to severe T-storms in the area. Low: 70
FRIDAY: More showers, possible T-storms. Winds: NW 8-13. High: 76
SATURDAY: Cold rain, heavy at times. Winds: NW 10-15. Wake-up: 60. High: 66
SUNDAY: Partly sunny, a better weather day. Winds: NW 8-13. Wake-up: 56. High: 73
MONDAY: Sunny and milder. Winds: SE 8-13. Wake-up: 57. High: 79
TUESDAY: Warm sun, feels like August again. Winds: S 10-20. Wake-up: 64. High: 85
WEDNESDAY: Showers and T-storms likely. Winds: S 10-15. Wake-up: 67. High: 82
Climate Stories…
Disasters Like Louisiana Floods Will Worsen as Planet Warms, Scientists Warn. Here’s an excerpt from The Guardian: “…There’s a very tight loop – as surface temperatures of the oceans warm up, the immediate response is more water vapor in the atmosphere. We’re in a system inherently capable of producing more floods.” The number of heavy rainfall events in the US has risen well above the long-term average since the 1990s, with large regional variances. While the north-east, midwest and upper great plains have experienced a 30% increase in heavy rainfall episodes – considered once-in-every-five year downpours – parts of the west, particularly California, have been parched by drought. Warmer air, influenced by heat-trapping gases released by human activity, can contain more water vapor than cooler air…”
Photo credit: “Close to two feet of rain fell over a 48-hour period in parts of southern Louisiana, causing residents to scramble to safety from flooded homes and cars.” Photograph: John Oubre/AP.
Nightly Newscasts Ignore Climate Change in Coverage of Worst U.S. Weather Disaster Since Hurricane Sandy. Here’s the intro to a story at Media Matters: “The major U.S. broadcast news networks have all ignored climate change in their nightly news coverage of Louisiana’s recent record-breaking rainfall and flooding. The New York Times and The Washington Post, by contrast, have explained how the extreme weather and flooding in Louisiana are in line with the predicted impacts of a warming planet. The disaster in Louisiana killed at least 11 people and displaced thousands more. The American Red Cross described the state’s flooding as “the worst natural disaster to strike the United States since Superstorm Sandy,” and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association classified the record rainfall as a once-in-every-500-years event — the eighth such event to take place in the U.S. since May 2015...”
Can We Economically Outgrow Climate Change Damages? Not For Hurricanes We Can’t. Here’s the intro to a story at phys.org that caught my eye: “When hurricanes like Katrina in 2005 or Sandy in 2012 impact on highly populated regions they bring about tremendous damages. More than 50% of all weather-related economic losses on the globe are caused by damages due to tropical cyclones. Researchers from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) now analyzed the magnitude of future hurricane losses in relation to economic growth. Showcasing the United States they found that financial losses per hurricane could triple by the end of the century in unmitigated climate change, while annual losses could on average rise by a factor of eight. Most importantly and contrary to prevalent opinion, they conclude that economic growth will not be able to counterbalance the increase in damage…” (File image: NASA).
Are We Feeling Collective Grief over Climate Change? Here’s an excerpt of a guest post at Scientific American: “…That’s not where most people are with climate,” Dr. Van Susteren states. “It takes a long time for some people to lay down the sense within that something is true.” Yet she speaks of a collective anxiety that is insidious, even if we haven’t managed to connect all the dots. “There isn’t the slightest shred of doubt in my mind, that everyone on some level is anxious, deeply anxious, about climate change,” the forensic psychiatrist says. She attributes her belief to decades of experience with people who have difficulty knowing what they are feeling on a deeper level, and she understands that anxiety comes from many headwaters...” (File image: NASA).
What We Can Say About the Louisiana Floods and Climate Change. Chris Mooney connects the dots at The Washington Post; here’s an excerpt: “…Observations over the US and many other places around the world show that heavy rain events have been becoming heavier over the last several decades. Climate models very consistently predict that this should happen as the climate warms, and basic physics leads us to interpret this change as, in large part, a consequence of increasing water vapor in the atmosphere,” explains Adam Sobel, a climate scientist at Columbia University. “On this basis we can say that climate change has most likely increased the probability of an event like this. One still can’t say that climate change ’caused’ this event, as each event has many causes and no event can be viewed solely as a consequence of long-term trends…”
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released anthrax that had been frozen in a reindeer carcass for decades, starting a deadly outbreak. In Baghdad, soaring temperatures forced the government to shut down for days at a time. In Kuwait, thermometers hit a record 54C (129F). July was the hottest month the world has endured since records began in 1880, scientists have said, and brought a painful taste of the troubles people around the world may have to grapple with as global warming intensifies. Results compiled by Nasa showed the month was 0.84C hotter than the 1951-1980 average for July, and 0.11C hotter than the previous record set in July 2015…”
In Siberia, melting permafrosthrough their own words in a series of in-person and Skype interviews, plus clips from some recent broadcasts on extreme weather events, independent videographer Peter Sinclair’s video describes the rapidly evolving perspectives: prominent national and local broadcast meteorologists saying they now see it as their responsibility to keep certain weather events in the context of the changing climate. The TV weathercasters featured in the video relate how their views on the science of climate change have evolved in recent years. “I think you’re seeing more and more TV meteorologists understand that responsibility,” says Washington Post meteorologist Jason Samenow...”