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Friday, March 14, 2025

Feeling hot, hot, hot...T&T records hottest day for 2023

by

Kalain Hosein
567 days ago
20230825

Swel­ter­ing heat con­tin­ued across Trinidad and To­ba­go, with Trinidad record­ing its hottest tem­per­a­tures for 2023 yes­ter­day af­ter­noon. The tem­per­a­ture sur­passed the 33.4°C set on Au­gust 7.

Da­ta from the Trinidad and To­ba­go Me­te­o­ro­log­i­cal Ser­vice (TTMS) showed that Pi­ar­co record­ed a max­i­mum high tem­per­a­ture of 33.8°C, the high­est for the year, while at Crown Point, a max­i­mum high of 31.8°C was record­ed.

Yes­ter­day al­so had the warmest morn­ing for the year at both cli­mate ref­er­ence sites. Pi­ar­co record­ed 27.2°C, which tied with Au­gust 23 for the high­est min­i­mum low tem­per­a­ture for 2023 to date. A whop­ping 28.7°C was not­ed at Crown Point, To­ba­go, the warmest for the year on the is­land.

T&T has en­tered the sec­ondary peak of the lo­cal heat sea­son, which runs from March through Oc­to­ber, with this peak be­gin­ning in Au­gust through Oc­to­ber. Light winds, rel­a­tive­ly high mois­ture, and high-pres­sure sys­tems be­tween trop­i­cal waves and cy­clones al­low warmer tem­per­a­tures to de­vel­op and per­sist across the coun­try dur­ing this time of year.

At present, the rem­nants of Trop­i­cal Storm Gert are per­sist­ing east of the Lee­wards, well north­east of Trinidad, lead­ing to a break­down of trade winds and an abun­dance of mois­ture at low lev­els of the at­mos­phere. This in­creased mois­ture al­lows the air to hold more heat, while the light to near-calm winds leads to this warm air gen­er­al­ly re­main­ing in place. Sun­ny days warm the air and land, while night­time mid and up­per-lev­el clouds lead to per­sis­tent heat, even dur­ing the night.

Yes­ter­day, tem­per­a­tures across the coun­try ranged from 32°C to 37°C, but how hot it felt out­side, known as the heat in­dex, was much high­er. Ac­cord­ing to da­ta from au­to­mat­ed and per­son­al weath­er sta­tions, heat in­dices across both is­lands reached lev­els that are con­sid­ered dan­ger­ous, be­tween 41°C and 51°C.

More hot tem­per­a­tures are fore­cast for next week, with a trop­i­cal wave and the In­tertrop­i­cal Con­ver­gence Zone bring­ing some brief, but need­ed heat re­lief by next Tues­day.


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