Daily Shmutz | GEOENGINEERING WEATHER / ‘CLIMATE CHANGE’  | 7/7/24

GEOENGINEERING WEATHER / ‘CLIMATE CHANGE’ 

 

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Tropical Storm Beryl Expected To Strengthen To A Hurricane Before Texas Landfall   [VIDEOS]   By weather.com meteorologists

July 7, 2024 @ 8:00 a.m. Eastern

At a Glance

  • Beryl is expected to strengthen into a hurricane before a Monday morning landfall.
  • Conditions will deteriorate along the Texas coast late Sunday.
  • Strong winds, storm surge, flooding rain and tornadoes are all threats.

Tropical Storm Beryl will be strengthening as it approaches the Texas coast and

hurricane warnings have been issued as it is expected to bring rainfall and storm surge flooding, high winds and tornadoes.

Current status: Beryl is centered about 220 miles southeast of Corpus Christi, Texas, and is moving toward the northwest. Beryl is predicted to intensify as it tracks toward the Texas coast for its final landfall on Monday morning.

A ir Force reserve reconnaissance aircraft is investigating Beryl Sunday morning to provide additional information.

Below is a look at the current location, information and satellite for Beryl based on the latest advisory from the National Hurricane Center.

Hurricane and storm surge alerts are in effect:

  • Hurricane Warning: From Baffin Bay northward to San Luis Pass, Texas. T his means that hurricane conditions (winds 75+ mph) are expected somewhere in the warning area by Monday morning.
  • Storm Surge Warning: From the north entrance of the Padre Island National Seashore to High Island, including Corpus Christi Bay, Matagorda Bay and Galveston Bay. This means that life-threatening storm surge flooding is expected.
  • Tropical Storm Warning: From the northeastern coast of Mexico northward to Baffin Bay, Texas and from San Luis Pass to High Island, Texas. Tropical storm conditions (winds 40+ mph) are expected by Sunday night in these locations.
  • Hurricane Watch: From the mouth of the Rio Grande northward to Baffin Bay, Texas and from San Luis Pass to Galveston Island, Texas. T his means that hurricane conditions (winds 75+ mph) are possible by Monday morning in these locations.
  • Storm Surge Watch: from the mouth of the Rio Grande northward to the north entrance of the Padre Island National Seashore and from High Island to Sabine Pass, Texas. This means that life-threatening storm surge flooding is possible.

Here’s the latest projected path and intensity forecast for Beryl:

 

150 Million Americans Under Weather Alerts As “Potentially Historic Heatwave” Tests Major Power Grids   BY TYLER DURDEN

SATURDAY, JUL 06, 2024 – 01:25 PM – Let’s start with the good news: The Lower 48 has reached peak summer, backed by 30 years of seasonal temperature trend data from Bloomberg.

Now for the bad news: A heat wave continues to set records across the Lower 48, with 150 million Americans under weather alert this holiday weekend.

Axios outlines the areas where the heat dome will impact the most:

  • Nearly half the U.S. population is under some type of extreme heat warning or advisory on Friday. The extreme heat in the Southeast to Mid-Atlantic is oppressive, with a strong upper-level high-pressure area, or heat dome, leading to hot and humid conditions.
  • Heat advisories and other alerts extend from New Orleans to New York City on Friday.
  • In the West, though, a near-record-strong heat dome is yielding scorchingly hot and dry conditions, and raising wildfire risks.
  • Excessive heat warnings along the West Coast stretch from Nevada and Arizona through California and northward into Oregon and Washington State.

National Weather Service meteorologist Jenn Varian told Bloomberg that Las Vegas is forecasted to hit a scorching 117F on Sunday into early next week, potentially tying the metro area’s all-time high recorded in 2005 and again in 2017.

“Confidence is increasing that this potentially historic heatwave will last several days,” the National Weather Service’s office in Portland, Oregon, wrote on X, adding temperatures will rise “into the 100s and 110s over much of California and southern Oregon.”

Here are more forecasted highs this weekend (list courtesy of Axios):

  • 118°F: Forecast high in Redding, Calif., on Saturday, tying the city’s all-time high.
  • 128°F: Forecast high in Death Valley, Calif., just 2-degrees shy of the hottest reliably measured temperature on Earth.
  • 100°F: Forecast high on Friday in Portland, Ore., with temperatures at or above this level from Friday through Tuesday in this typically cooler city.

This all means that power grids will be under stress this weekend as high temperatures boost air conditioning demand. Bloomberg says that grids in California and Texas should be closely monitored for an elevated blackout risks.

 

“Gobsmackingly Bananas”: Weather Models Predict Polar Vortex Invasion Into US    BY TYLER DURDEN

SUNDAY, JAN 07, 2024 – 02:35 PM – While it’s still uncertain, weather models suggest that a polar vortex might plunge large swaths of the Lower 48 into dangerously cold temperatures sometime late next.

There has been a lot of speculation on social media platform X about the incoming polar vortex.

Weather watchers and meteorologists point out that an ongoing stratospheric warming event could displace the polar vortex from the Pole and pour cold air into the Lower 48.

Continue reading

 

Beryl Churns In Gulf Of Mexico With Crosshairs On Texas    BY TYLER DURDEN

SATURDAY, JUL 06, 2024 – 11:05 AM – After battering Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and leaving a trail of destruction through the Caribbean that may exceed $5 billion in damages, Beryl, currently a tropical storm, has moved back into warm waters and is expected to restrengthen into hurricane status with landfall impacts expected across northern Mexico or southern Texas on early Monday.

AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Tyler Roys told Bloomberg that Beryl will make landfall around northern Mexico or southern Texas as a Category 1 hurricane between 0400 and 0600 local time Monday.

Computer models show Beryl’s forecasted track has been shifting slightly north in recent days, which may allow the storm to stay in warmer Gulf waters longer.

“It would not shock me if there is further intensification,” Roys said, adding, “Right now we are with Category 1, but if the trend continues and the track sneaks a little further north, there could potentially be more funny business going on with intensification. It is something we are watching.”

Roys said Beryl will likely bring heavy rains across eastern Texas, an area swamped with rain this year. This will elevate flood risks across the region early next week.

Another major danger is the storm’s threat to oil and gas leases in the US Federal waters of the Gulf of Mexico and energy infrastructure on shore and inland.

Beryl’s threat to oil/gas infrastructure (list courtesy of Bloomberg):

  • Tropical Storm Beryl’s threat to oil and gas leases in the US Federal waters of the Gulf of Mexico increases as its path shifts north after reaching Yucatan, according to National Hurricane Center data and Bureau of Ocean Energy Management data
  • Storm could be in path of leases with ~14 million cu. feet/d of natural gas production and ~1,583 b/d of oil and condensate output versus ~6.8 million cu. feet/d of offshore gas output on Thursday.
  • Storm’s potential path doesn’t pass over any major offshore oil or gas platforms, but is near some
  • Projection is based on Feb. BOEM production data broken down by lease and platforms within projected cone of storm
  • Projections are for location of Beryl through weekend and into next week

Beryl threatens some major offshore oil/gas platforms:

Continue reading

 

BRACING FOR BERYL   [56:30]  Dane Wigington  |  GeoengineeringWatch.org

Geoengineering Watch Global Alert News, July 6, 2024, # 465

“Meteorologists Have Never Seen Anything Like Hurricane Beryl” (from Scientific American). “Hurricane Beryl Is the Earliest Category 5 Storm in Recorded History” (from MSN). “Dangerous, record-breaking heat expected to continue spreading across U.S.” (from CBS News).  “Record-setting heat will continue to torment millions of Americans this weekend” (from CNN). Question, is Hurricane Beryl now scheduled to be utilized as a moisture pump to cool down portions of the superheating US? Even in the far north conditions are beyond alarming: “Wildfires ravage Arctic Circle” (from MSN). Is firestorm smoke being used by the weather makers to temporarily, toxically and very destructively block the sun from the rapidly melting polar ice? Are the climate engineers truly this desperate? How long till impact?

 

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