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  • Currently — July 21, 2023: North Atlantic heat wave reaches uncharted territory

Currently — July 21, 2023: North Atlantic heat wave reaches uncharted territory

Atlantic temperatures have now exceeded 1.5°C above even recent normals.

What you can do, currently.

The latest results are in, and Philadelphia will be our newest daily weather newsletter! Philly’s sign up page is now live, and we’ll get it going ASAP.

All the other cities received a very similar amount of votes, so we’ll work to expand to all of them over the coming months.

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Currently’s newest newsletters need lead writers!

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Even if you write as a hobby, we’re looking for people with personality and eagerness to change the world. Formal training in meteorology or an environmental science is a plus, but not necessary. This is a paid writing opportunity, part-time, approximately 2-5 hours per week.

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The weather, currently.

The North Atlantic Ocean heat wave is pushing further and further into uncharted territory — literally off the charts.

North Atlantic sea surface temperature anomaly, through July 19, 2023. Source: Leon Simons

Versions of this graph, made by climate researcher Leon Simons, have been going viral all summer, and for good reason. Ocean temperatures in the Atlantic are right now far and above anything ever seen in the instrumental record.

The latest figures basin-wide are about 1.5°C above not only pre-industrial levels, but the recent thirty-years mean. Parts of the North Atlantic, particularly near Atlantic Canada, are right now more than 5°C above normal. These are worryingly high values, mostly because they are so far above even previous record years.

The consequences of water this warm are still playing out. Forecasters have boosted their outlooks for this year’s Atlantic hurricane season, shallow water marine ecosystems are being disrupted, and extreme weather is already plaguing people on both sides of the pond — Florida, the Caribbean, and Europe have already endured record-breaking heatwaves.

Any climate scientist who tells you they know exactly what is going on is overstating their case — there are many theories, including a response to a recent reduction in sulfur aerosol pollution (as Currently has previously covered), the weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), an ocean-wide heat-transfer mechanism, a combination of some of the above, or something else entirely.

What’s clear is, we are in a climate emergency and adapting to these rapid changes is more difficult than preventing them in the first place.