North Slope records fall with ‘unprecedented warmth’

Climate change is a daily reality in Alaska. Those changes are happening across forests, tundra, in the Arctic ocean and in your backyard.

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(Graphic courtesy of Brian Brettschneider.)
(Graphic courtesy of Brian Brettschneider.)

Brian Brettschneider is a climatologist in Anchorage who closely tracks climate data and trends in the state. Alaska’s Energy Desk is going to be checking in with him regularly.

Two all time temperature records were set on the North Slope on July 13th and 14th. Deadhorse hit a record high of 85 degrees on July 13th, exceeding the previous record by two degrees. The next day, Kuparuk recorded a temperature of 86 degrees.

“That is the highest temperature ever recorded in Alaska within about 50 miles of the Arctic ocean,” Brettschneider said. “So really unprecedented warmth for Alaska.”

The normal for Alaska’s northern coast is the mid to upper 50’s. Brettschneider called the last few years in Alaska “relentlessly warm.”

(Graphic courtesy of Brian Brettschneider.)
(Graphic courtesy of Brian Brettschneider.)

“In 2016, only one day in the entire year has been below normal and that was only a very small amount,” Brettschneider said. “So the temperatures have been warm from basically last Christmas onward and it’s really been peaking in the last few weeks.”

Brettschneider said the seasonal outlooks show it’s going to remain above normal in the state for the foreseeable future.

Annie Feidt is the broadcast managing editor at Alaska Public Media. Reach her at afeidt@alaskapublic.org. Read more about Annie here

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