POWERING SMARTER WEATHER DECISIONS
Search

Record-breaking global atmospheric moisture in April

Earth just had its most moisture-laden April on record as unrivalled air and ocean temperatures caused atmospheric moisture content to surge across the planet.

It has been known since the 1800s that rising global air temperature allows Earth’s atmosphere to hold more moisture. This phenomenon is explained by the Clausius–Clapeyron relation, which shows that the atmosphere can hold about 7% more moisture for every 1°C of warming.

It comes as little surprise then that record-breaking global air temperatures last month occurred alongside unprecedented atmospheric moisture.

The amount of moisture in Earth’s atmosphere can be represented using a value called the ‘total column water’, which refers to the total amount of water in a vertical column of the atmosphere, including vapour, cloud water and cloud ice. This does not include the moisture that is present as precipitation (e.g. rain and snow).

The global total column water last month was the highest on record for the month of April, beating the previous record from 2016.

Image: Average global atmospheric moisture for April between 1940 and 2024, based on ERA5 data and processed by BenNollWeather

April’s record-breaking atmospheric moisture was caused by unrivalled warmth in the atmosphere, which allowed the air to hold more water, and unprecedented global ocean temperatures, which enhanced evaporation.

The map below shows the distribution of moisture in April 2024, with large areas of above average moisture in both the Southern and Northern Hemispheres.

Image: Total column water anomaly for April 2024, based on ERA5 data and processed by BenNollWeather

One area that had well above average atmospheric moisture in April was the state of Rio Grande do Sol in southern Brazil, which was hit by deadly floods in the first week of May.

There are also a few regions of drier-than-average air on the map above, including central and western Australia. However, when averaged out across the globe, Earth’s atmosphere last month was wetter than any other April on record.

Latest news

Satisfy your weather obsession with these news headlines from around the nation, and the world.

A great week for solar

Much of Australia will not see a drop of rainfall this week, with clear skies expected to increase solar output. The satellite image below shows much of Australia basking in Autumnal sunshine on Monday morning.  Image: Himawari-9 satellite image at 12:20pm AEST on Monday, May 20  The relatively dry week comes as a stubborn high-pressure […]

Subzero temps spread to Qld, NT

It was a chilly one overnight in southeastern Australia as you’d expect in the cold dry air in the wake of a cold front, but freezing temps were also recorded in our two northernmost states. Alice Springs recorded an overnight low of –0.3°C, the first subzero night of the year in the Northern Territory. For […]

Fog blankets Sydney halting ferries

Thick fog crept across Sydney on Friday morning, halting ferry services across the harbour for several hours.  The fog formed in pockets of Sydney’s west around 4am and funnelled into Sydney’s east via the Paramatta river early Friday morning.  The fog that Sydney’s east experienced this morning is called advection fog, where light northwesterly winds […]

Australia’s coldest April since 2015 during Earth’s warmest April on record

  Australia can be the hottest place in the world at the height of summer, but in April 2024 the country was an island of abnormally cold weather amid a sea of record-breaking global heat. Data released this week by Berkeley Earth shows that Earth’s global average air temperature in April 2024 was 1.67 ± […]