Deep Cold: Alaska Weather & Climate
Objective Comments and Analysis - All Science, No Politics
Primary Author Richard James
2010-2013 Author Rick Thoman
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Hail Reports
Friday, July 3, 2026
Fire Suppression
The multi-day spate of widespread lightning activity in the second half of June produced a 9-day total of about 57,000 cloud-to-ground lightning strikes, according to the Alaska Fire Service's detection network. It was a substantial wave of activity, but not all that unusual in the context of historical data since 2012; four other years had larger 9-day totals (2025, 2015, 2019, 2022), with the record being last year's 69,000 strikes that occurred just a few days earlier on the calendar.
As noted previously, the lightning outbreak was unusual for the level of activity in the southwest and northern interior regions. The Lower Yukon zone, in particular, saw a very intense onslaught compared to the climatological normal, and the year-to-date activity there is already tied with the 2019 record for the entire season.
Here's the actual strike density in absolute terms for the month of June:
The northwestern and southeastern interior were relatively inactive, with the most notable shortfall being in the Koyukuk and Upper Kobuk zone:
It has been something of a surprise to see wildfire activity remain very subdued despite all the lightning. There have been fire starts, of course, but they haven't grown; statewide acreage is only 29,000 acres, a mere 10% of the climatological median. The chart below shows that the disparity between the number of fire starts and fire acreage is very unusual; no other year since 1993 had so little acreage with more than 100 new fires in June.
Similarly, the fire acreage relative to the number of lightning strikes is extremely low:
Although last year had more fire, it was qualitatively similar: somewhat subdued fire growth relative to the extensive lightning activity. At least one key factor is that both years had a wet spring across most of the fire-prone interior:
Contrast this with 2022, for example, which saw very efficient fire growth (a lot of acres per fire and per lightning strike) after a dry (but not warm) spring:
Of course the weather in June also makes a huge difference for the fate of lightning-sparked fires; 2004 and 2013 were extremely warm in June, and fire growth was rapid. Last month had some warm days, but the second half of the month was near-normal for Fairbanks temperature overall; and there's been a substantial amount of rain in many areas in the past two weeks. Obviously when lightning is accompanied by widespread and significant rain - as opposed to "dry" thunderstorms - the fire activity is more often suppressed.
Not surprisingly, there is a correlation between June fire acreage and the rest of the season (fires tend to keep burning), but the weather is the key factor. For instance, 2009 was extremely warm and dry in July, producing big fire activity after a slow start. Hopefully we won't see anything similar this year.
Sunday, June 28, 2026
Cold Day in Utqiaġvik
The past couple of days were very warm across the interior, but yesterday was a very chilly day for the time of year in Alaska's northernmost town of Utqiaġvik. With a daily maximum temperature of 31°F at the airport, it was the latest sub-freezing day in "spring" since 1996, and the daily mean of 27.5°F ties with 1979 for the latest on record for such cold. Other than the same date in 1979, such a chilly day (mean temperature below 28°F) has not been observed before between June 22 and August 12.
Similar conditions were measured at the nearby high-quality CRN observing site, with a daily mean temperature of 27°F. This site's period of record only goes back to 2003, but the latest date with such chill was previously June 12.
There was also a little snow, and the late morning report of snow falling with a temperature of 26°F is the second latest on record for such conditions: the record is June 29, 1976.
One day's weather in isolation is not significant from a broader climate perspective, but nevertheless the chart below shows a striking contrast with the trend of recent decades: it shows the lowest daily mean temperature in the window June 15 - August 15.
As for a cause, there have been episodes of strong mid-atmospheric low pressure over the Arctic Ocean this month, and one of these troughs brushed past Alaska's Arctic coast in the past couple of days, bringing a cold air mass over the nearby ocean. A northerly breeze for most of the day yesterday, combined with heavy cloud cover and abundant sea ice nearby, was enough to keep temperatures below freezing.
Friday, June 26, 2026
More Lightning
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Like Clockwork
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Minimal Fire So Far
Interior Alaska finally saw some genuinely warm weather last weekend, with temperatures pushing up toward the 80°F mark in many areas; and Fairbanks saw its first 80°F of the season - a few days later than normal.
The mini-heatwave didn't last long, but renewed warmth is on the way in the coming days, and the predicted mid-atmosphere pressure pattern looks conducive to the onset of more widespread lightning in the near future. The map below shows the expected 500mb height anomaly (departure from normal) for the next 7 days, indicating a broad axis of above-normal heights (i.e. a ridge) from eastern Russia to northwestern Canada:
Contrast the pattern in the first two weeks of this month, when a strong trough over the Arctic Ocean brought cool northwesterly air flows to interior and northern Alaska:
Atmospheric moisture has been well below normal for the time of year, and that means a lack of atmospheric fuel for thunderstorms.
No surprise, then, that statewide lightning activity is below normal and is now moving into "significantly below normal" territory; the climatological median ramps up quickly from June 15 on. Click to enlarge:
Thanks to the lack of lightning, year-to-date fire activity is close to zero: only 5600 acres have burned statewide so far, compared to a historical median of 85,000 acres for this date. In view of the weather forecast, this seems likely to change soon.
It's also worth noting that the past two weeks have been quite dry for most of the interior, a marked change from the wet spring; fire fuels have no doubt dried out quite a bit.






























































