Currently in the Twin Cities — July 11, 2023: A few beautiful summer days coming up

Plus, India's monsoon season has switched into overdrive.

The weather, currently.

A few beautiful summer days

The cool front that touched off evening storms Monday and pushed temperatures up to hotter readings ahead of it also brought some Canadian wildfire smoke. Most of that will disperse by Tuesday midday. Behind the cool front it will be cooler again also with highs around 80 both Tuesday and Wednesday. We’ll have sunshine Tuesday with increasing clouds late ahead of the next system that will bring some spotty showers late Tuesday night into early Wednesday. It will be the first of a few minor disturbances that give us mainly light/spotty chances into Friday. Temperatures will be back toward normal, in the mid 80s by late in the week also.

What you can do, currently.

The climate emergency doesn’t take the summer off. In fact — as we’ve been reporting — we’re heading into an El Niño that could challenge historical records and is already supercharging weather and climate impacts around the world.

When people understand the weather they are experiencing is caused by climate change it creates a more compelling call to action to do something about it.

If these emails mean something important to you — and more importantly, if the idea of being part of a community that’s building a weather service for the climate emergency means something important to you — please chip in just $5 a month to continue making this service possible.

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What you need to know, currently.

India’s crucial monsoon rains have had a rollercoaster season so far.

The India-wide rainfall index has now officially shifted to an above-average season — though the season itself has been anything but average. During the onset phase in early June, rains were at least a week late, bringing prolonged heatwaves and droughts across the entire subcontinent. Now, those same rains have shifted into overdrive bringing massive flooding that has swept away cars and homes and bridges.

This “weather whiplash” is a characteristic of climate change, where extra heat in the atmosphere manifests itself in a sped-up hydrologic cycle, paradoxically bringing more intense droughts and more intense floods sometimes to the same place in quick succession.

Monday was the rainiest July day in Delhi in at least 40 years, forcing authorities to close schools. Further north in the Himalayas, more than 700 roads were closed by mudslides and washouts.