We have a stationary high-impact storm at the gates of Spain. And that will translate into 30ºC in November

We only have to look at a map these days to realize that we have a pretty significant storm heading our way. It will impact the entire western part of the peninsula and will leave more than 300 l/m2 on the Galician coast. However, it doesn’t seem like it. It doesn’t seem like it at all. But that’s how it is. Storm Claudia (which is the name of the third high-impact storm of the season) will bring rain and cold and wind; but just before that it will bring us a significant thermal rebound. Today, Wednesday, there are many areas of the country with 25 degrees and the nights will not be especially cold (it will not freeze anywhere). Bilbao is going to be 25 degrees and cities like Granada or San Sebastián are close to 30. How is it possible? Naturally, as explained in AEMETthe wind tends to leave the anticyclones and move towards the storms. “In this movement it suffers a deviation to the right of its trajectory so that the exit is not in a straight line but in a wide curve that rotates clockwise.” That is, storms rotate. When we talk about rivers of moisture (or connections with the Gulf of Mexico), we talk about this type of thing: air currents with a lot of humidity that are integrated into Atlantic storms thanks to this turn. The curious thing is that, in that turn, Claudia is pushing the southern air directly into Spain. AEMET What we can expect. Heat. At least, during Wednesday and throughout the country. During Thursday, the most classic effects of the storm (and that includes the cold) will begin to be seen in the west of the peninsula. We are talking about temperature drops of eight or ten degrees. For the weekend, most of Spain will have maximum temperatures below 15 degrees. And then the party begins. In a matter of hours we are going to see a lot of rain, a lot of wind and a considerable sea storm arrive in Spain. The first impact will be in the Canary Islands, but it will be the west of the peninsula the one who will bear the brunt: with winds of 110 kilometers per hour and accumulations of up to 350 liters. They are expected waves of up to four meters on the coasts of Galicia. Image | TropicalTidBits | SrGPicker In Xataka | It’s going to rain in Galicia. It seems normal but it is something more: the prelude to a total change in the weather in Spain

This heat wave has very little normal because of a “stationary” situation

We approach the culminating point of the heat wave. In many places the thermometers have already exceeded the mark of the 40º Celsius and the situation will last throughout the week, according to the forecasts. The question for many is to what extent this is strange in the middle of August. In full heat wave. Yesterday we lived that could be the first day of the new heat wave that looms over Spain. During the day the State Meteorology Agency (AEMET) registered temperatures above 43º In two seasons in the south of the Peninsula (Badajoz, and Almadén, in Ciudad Real), but many more registered maxims above 40º. A heat, normal? The last days of July and early August tend to be the hottest of the year. That is why it is logical to think that we are simply at the heat of the cannula. However, there are ways to verify that this is not the case. First, the terminology used: heat waves are, by definition, abnormal heat situations. Although there is no strict definition of what a heat wave is, we can resort to Aemet as standard. This situation occurs when at least 10% of the weather stations collect temperatures in the 95th of the distribution for at least three consecutive days. The agency has warned of the possibility that we are in the first days of a heat wave, it has not confirmed that we are already in one since we are still talking about forecasts. Of course, the probability assigned to the event is high, of 80%. More than 10. Another way of seeing the uniqueness of this event is through thermal anomalies, the difference between the temperatures that we predict or observed and the average temperature that would correspond to these dates in a certain place or area. According to Physicist Sergio Escama points out in Meteoredthe weather models advance thermal anomalies between 10º and 12º that will affect “wide areas” not only of the southern peninsular, also the center and interior. The heat will also be elevated for dates in the northern half, although foreseeably not until the same point. The answer, also in the atmosphere. If we want to understand what has normal and what is anomalous this situation, we can also look at the situation of the atmosphere. According to Details Aemetwe are faced with a “quite stationary, with high Atlantic pressures extending over a large part of the territory and low pressures to the peninsular southwest”. This situation facilitates the entry of warm and dry air from North Africa. The situation is aggravated by the fact that we are in summer, which implies a high degree of insolation due to the longest days and the greatest angle with which the sun affects the territory. What can we expect from the heat wave. The agency foresee That the maxims today continue to rise, with the mercury exceeding the 40º “in large areas of the southern half of the Atlantic aspect and surroundings of the Miño,” according to the agency in its forecast. Tomorrow Tuesday could also register temperatures above 40º in much of the southern half of the Atlantic aspect and also in the depressions of the Northeast. Thus, Aemet He has activated notices For extreme temperatures in almost the entire peninsula, with several orange notices for important risks in part of the southern quadrant, Andalusia and areas of Galicia. Many of these notices will remain active during the highest heat hours at least between today and Thursday. The northern hemisphere, to the red red. The anomalous situation that affects our environment has its reflection in the data at a global scale: the northern hemisphere is also in a situation of warm anomaly. According to the data of Climate Resanalyzer (of July 29), the average temperature in this hemisphere is 22.43º. This represents a thermal anomaly of 0.75º with respect to the average of the years between 1991 and 2020, but an anomaly of 1.14º above the average of the years between 1979 and 2000. This implies that we are before the third most warm August in the northern hemisphere, behind the year 2023 and tied with 2024. In Xataka | The Catalan and Segura basins toured different paths during the drought. Now they share something: the passage of the trough Image | ECMWF

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