October 11, 2023

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Report: The US just had its seventh-warmest September on record

A map of the U.S. plotted with 24 weather and climate disasters each costing $1 billion or more that occurred between January and September, 2023.  (Image credit: NOAA/NCEI
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A map of the U.S. plotted with 24 weather and climate disasters each costing $1 billion or more that occurred between January and September, 2023.  (Image credit: NOAA/NCEI

September 2023 was remarkably warm and quite dry across the contiguous United States.

The month also brought and flooding rains to parts of the nation, according to scientists from NOAA's National Centers for Environmental Information.

Below are highlights from NOAA's September U.S. climate report:

Climate by the numbers

September 2023

The average September temperature across the contiguous U.S. was 67.8 degrees F—2.9 degrees above the 20th-century average—making it the seventh-warmest September in NOAA's 129-year climate record.

New Mexico and Texas both saw their warmest Septembers on record, while Minnesota had its second warmest. An additional 10 states saw their top-10 warmest Septembers on record.

The average precipitation last month was 2.10 inches (0.39 of an inch below average), ranking the month in the driest third of all Septembers in the historical record.

Ohio had its fifth-driest September on record with Indiana and Michigan seeing a top-10 driest September on record. Connecticut had its third-wettest September on record, while Nevada and New Jersey both had one of their top-10 wettest Septembers.

Year to date (YTD, January through September 2023)

The year-to-date average temperature for the contiguous U.S. was 57.0 degrees F—1.9 degrees above average—ranking as the 10th-warmest such YTD on record.

Mississippi and Florida had their warmest January–September period on record while Delaware and Maryland saw their second warmest. An additional 24 states had a top-10 warmest such YTD on record. No state experienced a top-10 coldest event for this nine-month period.

Looking at the year-to-date average precipitation, the total was 23.32 inches (0.12 of an inch above average), ranking in the middle third of the record.

Massachusetts ranked second wettest, while Connecticut ranked third wettest on record for this YTD. Six additional states—Maine, Nevada, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wyoming—ranked among their top-10 wettest for this period. Conversely, Iowa ranked 10th driest for this nine-month period.

A map of the U.S. plotted with significant climate events that occurred during September 2023. Credit: NOAA Headquarters
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A map of the U.S. plotted with significant climate events that occurred during September 2023. Credit: NOAA Headquarters

Billion-dollar disasters

From January through the end of September 2023, the U.S. was struck by 24 separate weather and climate disasters, each with losses exceeding $1 billion. These disasters included:

The total cost of these events (not including the costs of Idalia) exceeds $67.1 billion.

Since 1980, when NOAA started to track these events, the U.S. has sustained 372 separate weather and climate disasters where overall damages/costs reached or exceeded $1 billion (including the Consumer Price Index adjustment to 2023). The cumulative cost of these events exceeds $2.630 trillion.

Other notable highlights from this report for September

Persistent heat brought record-breaking temperatures in parts of the nation

Several notable storms impacted portions of the U.S.

Provided by NOAA Headquarters

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