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  • Currently in NYC — June 29, 2023: Mostly sunny and warm with hazy skies

Currently in NYC — June 29, 2023: Mostly sunny and warm with hazy skies

Plus, Greenland sets a new daily ice melt record.

The weather, currently.

Mostly sunny and warm with hazy skies

We did it. We finally have a break from the instability. Look out your window on Thursday and say hiiiiii to the high pressure system that is protecting us from the storminess. Expect a warm day with highs in the mid 80s. The humidity will be present but not as noticeable as it has been this week. Prepare yourself for a day filled with sunshine! However, smoke from the wildfires could diminish our air quality once again and make the sky a little hazy. It’s time to leave that damp umbrella at home and enjoy a much-deserved, sunny summer day.

Bike Forecast:

5 out of 10

What you can do, currently.

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What you need to know, currently.

Astonishingly record-setting Atlantic Ocean temperatures have helped trigger a record-breaking melting of the Greenland ice sheet surface this week, new data show.

This week’s melt covered more than 50% of the Greenland ice sheet, only the third time that has ever happened since modern records have been kept, and the earliest-ever in the melt season. Above-freezing temperatures were recorded all the way to the top of the enormous ice sheet, more than 10,000 ft (3,300 m) above sea level. Temperatures reached 73°F (23°C) in far northern Greenland due to downsloping dry winds.

The Greenland melt was “certainly an extreme melt event highlighting the climate emergency,” according to Joel Gombiner, a polar scientist at the University of Washington. “The Greenland ice sheet completely melted last time CO2 was this high. The only question is how fast it disappears this time.”

Greenland is warmer now than at any time over at least the past 1,000 years. The melting of the Greenland ice sheet is directly linked to climate change caused by burning fossil fuels, and an acceleration of its melt is one of the tipping points expected if global warming exceeds the 1.5°C target agreed to in the Paris Climate Accord.