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- Currently in NYC — September 19, 2023: Sunshine and a cool breeze
Currently in NYC — September 19, 2023: Sunshine and a cool breeze
Plus, Antarctic sea ice is having a weird year.
The weather, currently.
Sunshine and a cool breeze
This is more like it! Brilliant blue skies with comfortable temperatures. Sign me up to live a lifetime of days just like today. We dry out and shine with a high of 75°F. The breeze will swirl swiftly out the northwest and give you all those autumnal vibes. Something else autumnal occurs this evening, we drop into the 6 o’clock hour for sunsets. Sunset for this evening happens at 6:58pm. We have a clear night ahead with low temperatures falling into the upper 50s. It’s ‘window-open weather’ once again. Enjoy the incredible day!
Bike Forecast:
10 out of 10
What you need to know, currently.
Antarctic sea ice continues to grow at a pace far below any previous year on record. As we approach springtime in the Southern Hemisphere and with a Pacific El Niño strengthening, there are worries that melt season may have already begun weeks early.
There is some speculation that Antarctic sea ice extent, which has been at daily record lows for the last 4 months, might already have peaked for this year.
It has been a very weird year, that I'm not sure anyone entirely understands.
— Dr. Robert Rohde (@RARohde)
2:21 PM • Sep 18, 2023
The BBC interviewed Antarctic research scientists, and their words are worth reflecting on.
"It's so far outside anything we've seen, it's almost mind-blowing," Walter Meier, who monitors sea-ice with the National Snow and Ice Data Center, told the BBC.
Since it is already floating, melting sea ice does not on its own raise sea levels. But sea ice forms a buffer encircling Antarctica from warming waters, and the loss of that sea ice would accelerate the loss of land ice in the Antarctic ice sheets, which would raise sea levels — perhaps dangerously so.
This is one further sign that we are in the emergency phase of the climate crisis, and that world leaders need to do uncomfortable things to restore a climate balance and pave the way for a just future for everyone.
What you can do, currently.
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One of my favorite organizations, Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, serves as a hub of mutual aid efforts focused on climate action in emergencies — like hurricane season. Find mutual aid network near you and join, or donate to support existing networks: