Global climate summary for September 2021
NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information is finished rounding up and analyzing all the global weather observations for the past month, and has released the monthly summary for September 2021. According to the analysis, September 2021 was 1.62 degrees Fahrenheit (0.90 degrees Celsius) warmer than the 20th-century average of 59.0 degrees F (15.0 degrees C). It was the fifth-warmest September in the 142-year record, dating back to 1880.
Over land, temperatures were especially warm in southern South America, Northwest Africa, and Southeast China. Over oceans, the tropical South Atlantic was especially warm as were the subtropics of the Pacific in both the Northern and Southern Hemisphere. The broad area of cooler-than-average surface temperatures across the tropical Pacific was a sign that La Niña is back.
Consistent with the planet’s long-term warming trend, nine of the ten warmest Septembers on record have occurred in the past decade. The last time the global average temperature in September was cooler than average was 1976. The long-term warming trend in September is 1.31 degrees F (0.73 degrees C) per century, which means Septembers today are nearly 2 degrees warmer today than they were in 1880.
September was rainier than average over much of India, Southeast Asia, Indonesia and the Maritime Continent, and China. According to the monthly summary from the Global Precipitation Climatology Project,
…it is clear that the summer Asian monsoon, climatologically the strongest precipitation feature on the planet, was particularly intense in September, with above average rainfall over most of South Asia, China and the Maritime Continent. The strong monsoon, with imbedded tropical cyclones, produced intense rain events across the region with flooding in northeast China, Indonesia, Indochina and western India and Pakistan.
For more details and analysis of September 2021 climate, see NCEI’s Assessing the Global Climate in September 2021.