Currently in D.C. — October 6, 2023: We have a cloudy day ahead

Plus, September was the largest monthly climate anomaly ever observed.

The weather, currently.

Cloudy and cool

Good and cloudy morning you all! We have a gray day ahead of us, and the temperature starts to drop. The maximum will be 79°F, which then will drop to 61°F. Also, get ready for some showers at night that give way to a rainy Saturday. But don’t you worry, by Sunday the sun will have come back. Although, today I’ll sure miss the golden sun rays of the sunset. Have you noticed how light changes from season to season? It’s magical.

I think Eudora Welty nailed it when she wrote: “Today, in October sun, it's all gold—sky and tree and water."

What you need to know, currently.

New data show that September was largest monthly climate anomaly ever observed globally.

The bright red bar at the right side of the graph below is a shocking summation of this year’s extraordinary climate extremes: September 2023 was 0.5°C warmer than any other September in history — a margin that surpasses all of the combined warming of the past 20+ years. It was so unusually hot that climate scientists were left speechless.

Floods, fires, heat waves, droughts — this year has already featured disasters on a massive scale, and the growing El Niño is likely to compound those disasters in the months to come.

We are in a climate emergency — and each of us are already part of the team that can build a better future.

But I get it. This kind of news is so difficult to hear and decide what to do with. Each of us are only one person, and sometimes it feels completely overwhelming to watch the world literally spiral out of control.

Our sister publication, The Phoenix, has some advice for how to navigate your emotions, join with others, and take meaningful action.

What you can do, currently.

Currently Sponsorships are short messages we co-write with you to plug your org, event, or climate-friendly business with Currently subscribers. It’s a chance to boost your visibility with Currently — one of the world’s largest daily climate newsletters — and support independent climate journalism, all at the same time. Starting at just $105.

One of my favorite organizations, Mutual Aid Disaster Relief, serves as a hub of mutual aid efforts focused on climate action in emergencies — like Hurricane season. Find mutual aid network near you and join, or donate to support networks in Florida: