As the calendar prepares to flip to December, most El Paso trees are still holding their leaves – the result of the warmest autumn on record following a record-hot summer.
El Paso’s average monthly temperature has been at least 5 degrees above the 1991-2020 normal temperatures every month since July. El Paso has never seen this kind of sustained heat, further evidence of the impact of climate change and urban heat island effects on the region.
On the heels of the hottest summer ever recorded in El Paso (defined by meteorologists as June-August), El Paso is on pace to set a record for warmest fall ever (September-November).
With the hottest summer and fall ever recorded, El Paso obviously is on track to set a record for the warmest year on record. The hottest year recorded to date was 2017. El Paso will break that record this year if December temperatures are at the 1991-2020 average for the month. El Paso temperatures have been above the monthly average 10 out of 11 months so far in 2023.
The post El Paso continues to shatter heat records appeared first on El Paso Matters.
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