NOAA Logo NCDC / Climate Monitoring / Climate of 2001 / Search / Help
Dept. of Commerce Logo

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

Climate of 2001 - January
Global Analysis

National Climatic Data Center, 14 February 2001

NOAA Logo
January Global Surface Mean Temperature Anomailes
larger image
line separating sections

Top of Page Temperature

Globally averaged temperatures were anomalously warm in January 2001. A return to near-record land temperatures and above average ocean temperatures led to a combined land and ocean temperature that was 0.52C (0.94F) above the 1880-2000 long-term mean (0.41C [0.74F] warmer than the 1961-1990 base period), the third warmest January in the 122 year time series. Since 1978, this was the 24th January in a row with above average global temperatures. After weakening in mid-2000, La Nina conditions have been strengthening in recent months, with subsurface anomalies as great as -3C (-5.4F) in the equatorial waters of the eastern Pacific. Nonetheless, globally averaged sea surface temperatures were 0.35C (0.63F) above average, the fifth warmest January on record. Land surface temperatures, in contrast to January 2000, once again averaged near all-time highs, 0.91C (1.64F) above the 1880-2000 average. Temperatures remained near record levels in the northern and southern hemisphere extratropics, while the continuation of La Nina conditions contributed to temperatures in the Tropics that were closer to the long-term average.

Global Temp Anomalies, January
larger image
The adjacent map shows large areas of above-average temperatures (based on a 1961-1990 base period) in North America and Europe. A westerly flow of milder Pacific air covered much of Canada and the U.S. northern Plains resulting in temperatures from 5C (9F) to 10C (18F) above normal in January. Above normal temperatures also stretched from Western Europe to the Ural Mountains with temperatures more than 5C (9F) above the 1961-1990 average in Eastern Europe.

This contrasted sharply with a large area of below-average temperatures covering much of Central Asia. Temperatures were from 3C to 6C below average throughout much of central and eastern Russia as well as eastern Mongolia and northeast China. Herders in Inner Mongolia continue to deal with temperatures as low as -60F (-51C) and heavy snow that has killed hundreds of thousands of cattle. See NCDC's Climate Watch page for more information on this and other extreme events in January. In the Southern Hemisphere, temperatures were much above average in southeastern Australia and the southern one-third of South America.


Global Lower Tropospheric Anomalies, January 2001
larger image
Data collected by NOAA's TIROS-N polar-orbiting satellites and adjusted for time-dependent biases by NASA and the Global Hydrology and Climate Center at the University of Alabama in Huntsville indicate that January global temperatures in the lower half of the atmosphere (lowest 8 km) were the 10th coolest (-0.08C below average) since satellite measurements began in 1979. Temperatures were the coldest on record in January 2000. The average lower tropospheric temperature in the Northern Hemisphere was near the long-term average, while the Southern Hemisphere temperature was -0.15C (-.27F) below the 1979-1998 average.
line separating sections

Top of Page Precipitation

Global Precip Anomalies, January 2001
larger image
January precipitation anomalies using a base period of 1961-1990 are shown on the adjacent map. Much of the continent of Australia recorded drier than normal conditions in January 2001 with precipitation deficits exceeding 50mm (2 inches) in northern and eastern parts of the continent. Much of Brazil and northern sections of South America were also drier than normal, in contrast to the previous month when rainfall was more than 100mm (4 inches) above normal in many of these same areas.

Much of the U.K. was drier than normal, after months of above average precipitation which brought flooding to parts of the country. The only exception was in Wales where heavy rains brought flooding at the beginning of the month. An area of positive precipitation anomalies stretched from Portugal to the Balkans. Precipitation was also above normal in the Far East, some islands of the western Pacific, much of Argentina and the central U.S. A period of below normal precipitation which began more than 2 1/2 years ago in the southern U.S. continued in January. Drier than normal conditions also continued in the U.S. Pacific Northwest with seasonal snowpack less than 50% of normal in many locations. Regional climate highlights for the globe and the U.S. are available.

line separating sections

References:

Peterson, T.C. and R.S. Vose, 1997: An Overview of the Global Historical Climatology Network Database. Bull. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., 78, 2837-2849.


For all climate questions other than questions concerning this report, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services Division:

Climate Services Division
NOAA/National Climatic Data Center
151 Patton Avenue, Room 120
Asheville, NC 28801-5001
fax: 828-271-4876
phone: 828-271-4800
email: ncdc.orders@noaa.gov
line separating sections

For questions about this report, please contact:

Jay Lawrimore
NOAA/National Climatic Data Center
151 Patton Avenue
Asheville, NC 28801-5001
fax: 828-271-4328
email: Jay.Lawrimore@noaa.gov

-or-

David Easterling
NOAA/National Climatic Data Center
151 Patton Avenue
Asheville, NC 28801-5001
fax: 828-271-4328
email: David.Easterling@noaa.gov

Top of Page Top of Page


NOAA Logo NCDC / Climate Monitoring / Climate of 2001 / Search / Help

http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/2001/jan/global.html
Downloaded Wednesday, 07-Jan-2009 21:51:31 EST
Last Updated Monday, 11-Jul-2005 08:15:36 EDT by Jeff.Cox@noaa.gov
Please see the NCDC Contact Page if you have questions or comments.