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Russia warns of hot summer after June records by AFP Staff Writers Moscow (AFP) July 13, 2021 Russia's meteorological service said Tuesday the country could see its hottest summer on record, driven by climate change, after a record-breaking heatwave in June. Moscow was hit by a historic heat wave at the end of June, with temperatures reaching a 120-year record. "We estimate that temperatures will be high in the country both in the second half of July and August," meteorologist Roman Vilfand of the Rosgidromet agency said at a press conference. He added that it was "of course possible" that it will be the hottest summer ever recorded in Russia. Vilfand said the average temperature in the European part of Russia was the highest since records began 130 years ago. Russia as a whole saw its hottest June since 2012. Vilfand said that not all of the country was affected by the heatwave, saying there were "swathes of cold in western Siberia." He also explained that climate change is leading to a shift in atmospheric circulation, due to significant temperature contrasts between the country's Arctic and southern regions. "There are more and more anticyclones in northern regions which increases the risk of fires," he said. According to many scientists, Russia -- especially its Siberian and Arctic regions -- is among the countries most exposed to climate change. Russia has set numerous records in recent years and in June 2020 registered 38 degrees Celsius (100.4 degrees Fahrenheit) in the town of Verkhoyansk -- the highest temperature recorded above the Arctic circle since measurements began. The rising mercury levels have contributed to devastating floods and forest fires that have affected Siberia with increasing regularity. They are also contributing to the melting of permafrost, which covers about two-thirds of Russia's vast territory.
AIRS tracks record-breaking heat wave in Pacific Northwest Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 12, 2021 An unprecedented heat wave that started around June 26 smashed numerous all-time temperature records in the Pacific Northwest and western Canada. NASA's Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), aboard the Aqua satellite, captured the progression of this slow-moving heat dome across the region from June 21 to 30. An animation of some of the AIRS data show surface air temperature anomalies - values above or below long-term averages. Surface air temperature is something that people directly feel when they are ... read more
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