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Vicious cold snap puts northern US in deep freeze

2010 was coldest year in U.K. since 1986
London (UPI) Jan 21, 2011 - U.K. weather experts say 2010 was the coldest year recorded in Britain since 1986 while the rest of the world had one of the hottest on record. The U.K. Met Office said the mean temperature in 2010 was 46.5 degrees Fahrenheit, the 12th coldest on record, The Daily Telegraph reported Friday. The coldest years in the last 100 years were 1919 and 1963, when mean temperatures plunged to 45.4 degrees F, and the next coldest was 1986 when it was 45.8 degrees F, the Met Office said.

Meanwhile the rest of the world was warmer than ever, 0.9 F hotter than the long-term average of 57.2 F, making 2010 the second hottest on record after 1998. A freezing beginning of 2010 in January and February and then the coldest December ever recorded brought down the temperature in the United Kingdom, Met Office meteorologist Barry Grommett said. Despite the cold year in the United Kingdom, the world is warming, Grommett said. "It is a natural perception to look out window and see snow and think the world cannot be possibly be warming but the United Kingdom is a small dot on the world surface and the important picture is global, and in that 2010 has been a very warm year," he said.
by Staff Writers
Chicago (AFP) Jan 22, 2011
There is a brutally frigid point on the thermometer -- minus 40 degrees -- where Celsius and Fahrenheit meet, and it was even colder than that in parts of the US Midwest as an Arctic blast struck over the weekend.

Americans were bundling up Saturday as the coldest weather of the season was forecast to sock cities from Chicago to New York and Boston, with temperatures that have already prompted weather service warnings.

The coldest weather in two years slammed Minnesota, where International Falls -- which proudly proclaims itself the "Icebox of the Nation" -- recorded a shocking 46 degrees below zero (-43 Celsius).

The Friday temperature tied the town's coldest reading since it began keeping records in 1897.

By Saturday morning it had risen to a balmy -13 degrees (-25 C), the town's airport reported, but the forecast wind-chill factor was far colder, and the National Weather Service issued a hazard advisory warning of frostbite and "life-threatening hypothermia."

Much of New York state and the US northeast region known as New England will see temperatures barely reach the Fahrenheit teens on Saturday, forecasters at The Weather Channel (TWC) reported.

Friday's -4 degrees (-20 C) in Chicago marked the coldest January 21 in the Windy City in 27 years, broadcaster WGN reported.

January regularly brings frigid cold to the US heartland and the northeast, but the latest chill is exceptional, several meteorologists have said.

"We have got an Arctic chill in store" for much of the eastern half of the United States, TWC said, with temperatures as much as 25 degrees below average.

Meteorologists were also forecasting yet another major snow storm to hammer parts of the US southeast and northeast by the middle of next week, the latest in a series of storms that have canceled thousands of flights and left cities scrambling to clear deep drifts of snow.

Residents in Minnesota appeared to be taking the winter blast in stride.

"We're used to that. Well, maybe not 46 below, but we're used to the cold," Addie Khalar, a reserve postmaster in Babbitt, told the Duluth News Tribune, which reported that many people did not let the cold snap deter them from ice fishing or playing outdoor hockey.

"You plug in your car. You keep it in the garage. You dress for it. And you show up for work," Khalar said.

earlier related report
Snow hinders Lunar New Year travel in China
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 21, 2011 - Snow blanketing southern and eastern parts of China hampered travellers returning home for the Lunar New Year celebrations, with air, rail and road traffic severely disrupted, state media said Friday.

The snowfall in southern China this week has been the worst so far this winter, the China Meteorological Bureau said. Heavy snow has also fallen in central Hunan and eastern Jiangxi, Anhui and Zhejiang provinces.

China's 40-day annual Lunar New Year peak travel period began this week, when travellers are expected to make 2.6 billion trips on trains, planes, boats and buses.

On Thursday, snow forced hundreds of flight delays and cancellations as airports in the eastern cities of Shanghai, Nanjing, Wuhan and Hangzhou struggled to cope with the winter weather.

Shanghai's Pudong and Hongqiao airports suffered delays to 500 flights, while airports in Hangzhou and Chongqing were forced to shut for hours due to ice and snow, the China Daily reported.

Three trains were cancelled at Shanghai's main railway station and 20 others suffered delays, while 250 buses travelling from neighbouring provinces failed to arrive at Shanghai's long-distance bus terminal, the newspaper said.

Sections of eastern Jiangxi's major expressway were closed with traffic jams stretching for 20 kilometres (12 miles) in the city of Jiujiang, the report said.

Snowfall in the south was expected to lighten from Friday, but low temperatures were expected to persist, the national weather bureau said.



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Airports must plan for snow storms: EU
Brussels (AFP) Jan 19, 2011
The European Commission warned airports on Wednesday of looming regulation to prevent a repeat of the Christmas travel chaos and demanded to see battle plans for next winter. European transport commissioner Siim Kallas held a meeting with top executives from the biggest airports after December snow forced passengers to sleep at terminals when tens of thousands of flight were cancelled. " ... read more







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