Austin (KXAN)-Summer Meteorology begins on June 1, 2025. Before the start of the season, we already see the numbers late in the post that occur during the summer.
Our Climate Central has analyzed warming in the country. They used a sample of 242 cities, including Austin. Among their findings is that 97 % of cities that were analyzed with warmth at a rate of 2.6 degrees Fahrenheit since 1970.
Among those 242 cities in the study, 77 of which were heated at a rate of 3 Fahrenheit.
The last 55 years (1970 to 2024) of summer data (average temperature) was seen to determine the increasing heat.
They also concluded that one out of every five cities is currently suffering from an additional one month than summer days more hot than abnormal for what was realistic in 1970.
What contributed to this amazing increase? The central climate indicates that in 2024, carbon pollution that cultivates the planet escalated as soon as possible. It causes Swelter Sweleter early and contributes to the maximum dangerous temperatures more frequent and more intense.
Is it every region in the country? Yes. However, as always, there are parts of the country where heating is higher than others. In this modern analysis, it is the northwest and the southwest that see the highest numbers.

In fact, the 5 best cities with most warming are all West Mississippi. Renault tops the list, followed by Boys, El Passo, Las Vegas, and Solt Lake City.
Copernicus reported that the temperatures so far this year have been warm at least like the two hottest records, which are 2023 and 2024. This may mean that when 2025 ends, it will rank first in the warmer years.
As specifically for the schedule from June 1 from August 31, most of the country will be hotter than usual in an area that begins in the northwest, to the southwest, via Texas to the states of the Gulf Coast to the northeast.
Where is Austin the fare in this field?

For beginners, Austin has witnessed, since 1970, a 50 -day increase in the number of most hot days. Only this summer. Imagine how this number will look like if we take into account a full year.

The average summer temperature in a period of 55 years increased by a little less than five degrees. It makes sense then why we see more highlands 90+-PEGREE even before the start of the summer season.
The effect that all of us tells is that it can impose body tax. These hot temperatures … or, more hot than hot … pose a threat to some heat -related diseases. For years, the National Integrated thermal Health Information System has the same as the difficult heat to cool our bodies, which leads to heat contractions, heat fatigue, and worse, stroke.
The national weather service indicates that the heat is the number 1 when it comes to weather -related deaths. Reports of the American Medical Association, JAMA, that the record is 2,325 people who died of heat in the latest reports, 2023.
The heat can also contribute to bad air quality. In the center of Texas, we see the potential of more and more ozone working days as a result. Harmful pollutants are held near the surface of the earth, which increases the composition of ozone at the Earth level, according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency. This is not in good health for those who suffer from asthma and other respiratory diseases.
The worst effect is that deadly heat waves grow not only in the United States but all over the world.