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From the Atlantic hurricane season to wildfires in the West: How 2020 weather shattered records

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Imagedepotpro/iStockBy EMILY SHAPIRO and DANIEL MANZO, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — This year became one for the record books for yet another reason: The turbulent weather of 2020 smashed numerous records, from storms to wildfires to heat waves.

Record-breaking hurricane season ‘in every sense of the word’

This year was the fifth year in a row that the Atlantic hurricane season was an above-normal active season, and 2020 is now in the record books as “the most active hurricane season on record” in the Atlantic, said Jason Smerdon, a climate scientist at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season — which ran from June to November — had 30 named storms, the most in recorded history, beating a record previously held by the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season. The very active 2005 season, which included Hurricane Katrina, had 28 named storms in the Atlantic basin.

This year was also only the second time that the Greek alphabet was used to name storms after running through the full English alphabet.

Twelve named storms made landfall in the continental U.S. this season, beating the record from 1916 when nine storms made landfall.

Six of those storms that made landfall were designated as hurricanes, which is double what’s normal for one season. This year ties 1886 and 1985 for most hurricane landfalls in a single season.

Louisiana was hit particularly hard this year with five named storms making landfall, marking a record for Louisiana and for any state.

After Hurricane Iota — the strongest hurricane to hit Nicaragua in November — struck, Clare Nullis, spokesperson for the World Meteorological Organization, said at a UN news briefing in Geneva, “We’re running out of superlatives for this Atlantic hurricane season.”

“It’s record-breaking in every sense of the word,” she said.

Global warming is thought to be making hurricanes more powerful, because the hurricanes are “happening over warmer and warmer sea surface temperatures,” and it’s that warm water that “fuels hurricanes,” Smerdon said.

A warmer atmosphere also holds more moisture, so hurricanes are dumping more rain, he added, which makes storms more dangerous by intensifying flooding and storm surge.

“The sea surface temperature warming is also increasing the range of where hurricanes can form, which can influence things like the likelihood of landfall … expanding north in the northern Atlantic, for instance,” Smerdon said.

While global warming has a major impact, Smerdon said that overall, “the role of climate change in the number of hurricanes is not particularly well-resolved… It’s generally demonstrated that climate change may reduce hurricane activity slightly, but it will increase the number of large storms.”

Wildfires explode out West

2020 also marks the most active wildfire year on record for the western U.S., according to experts.

Three of the four largest fires in Colorado history erupted this year. The biggest was the Cameron Peak fire, which, fueled by winds and dry conditions, burned for 112 days until it was declared 100% contained in the beginning of December, The Colorado Springs Gazette reported.

In California, out of the six biggest wildfires in state history, five occurred in 2020, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.

By September 2020, California had reached the highest number of acres burned in a single year.

California’s massive fire activity can be linked to the Southwest drought that’s been ongoing for roughly two decades, according to Smerdon and Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at UCLA.

“The summer itself was one of the driest and hottest on record in a lot of the interior West,” Swain said. “The monsoon, which would normally bring summertime thunderstorms, was essentially a no-show this year. There was almost no precipitation in those interior states.”

The record warmth in the interior desert expanded to California and Colorado, Swain said, and when a lightning outbreak hit California in the late summer, “that’s when things really exploded out West.”

“We had this very unusual, even historically unprecedented, volume of dry lightning strikes in coastal California in August immediately following some all-time record heat,” Swain said. “That started a lot of fires — hundreds, if not thousands.”

Then “things got progressively worse and worse” in California and Colorado, Swain said.

Fires that began in the peak of summer lasted through the fall, fueled by very dry vegetation, record heat and, in some cases, lack of rain and extreme winds, Swain said.

Although California had briefly emerged from the longstanding Southwest drought a few years ago, the severe drought returned during 2020, Swain said, and conditions are now worsening. Recent evidence suggests the drought is driven by the rise in temperature in the West, Swain said.

Hottest year on record?

Speaking of temperature rise, 2020 brought “record-shattering warmth” to a lot of the Southwest, Swain said, with this August, September and October becoming the hottest months on record in California.

All of the lower 48 states had above-average temperatures this year, he said.

Across the globe, this January and September marked the warmest January and September on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Smerdon said 2020 will likely rank in the top three hottest years ever. Swain said “there’s a very good chance” 2020 will become the hottest year on record — a title currently held by 2016.

2020 as potentially the hottest year ever is “absolutely stunning,” Swain said, because of the strong La Niña event currently in the Pacific Ocean.

A strong La Niña “unearths a bunch of cold water temporarily in the Pacific Ocean, which typically would result in some of the coolest years on record,” Swain said. “And yet this year, that cooling effect in the Tropical Pacific apparently isn’t even enough to offset the all-time record warmth in so many other places on Earth.”

Swain cited climate change as a major reason behind the record warmth, and according to Smerdon, next year we should expect even more records.

“We are on this escalator of global temperatures increasing, and the fact that we’re seeing these records is not surprising as we continue this upward march,” Smerdon said. “When you consider the fact that the direction we’re clearly going — because there is a rock-solid connection between increases in greenhouse gases and increases in global temperatures — we’re on this continued path of warming, and all of the fallout from that warming is going to be something that’s part of our new normal.”

He offered a new perspective to look at the rising temperature records: “The years we’re experiencing now aren’t just the warmest years on record into the past, they’re going to be some of the coolest years on record going into the 21st century.”

Deadly tornadoes and a ‘once-in-a-decade occurrence’

The interior U.S. wasn’t immune to destructive weather either.

April brought the deadliest tornado outbreak since 2014, when at least 140 tornadoes touched down from Texas to Maryland.

Tennessee was especially hard-hit by tornadoes this year. As of September, 35 tornadoes had torn through the state, including Nashville, in 2020 — the most in any year since 2013, according to the National Weather Service.

The “very active and devastating” tornado year for Tennessee killed 28 people and injured hundreds more, the NWS said.

And in August, a powerful line of intense thunderstorms known as a derecho devastated Iowa and Illinois.

With wind gusts up to 140 mph, the derecho unleashed two tornadoes, led to four fatalities and left widespread destruction and power outages in its wake.

The NWS said a “derecho of this intensity is a roughly once-in-a-decade occurrence” for the area.

This derecho was even more rare due to the length of the powerful winds, which lasted 30 to 60 minutes instead of the usual 10 to 20 minutes, the NWS said.

This intense year of U.S. weather has left a staggering economic toll. As of early October, there were 16 weather events in 2020 where losses exceeded $1 billion each — tying the record for billion-dollar weather disasters from 2011 and 2017, according to the NOAA.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Human remains found at site of Nashville RV explosion described as apparent 'intentional act': Sources

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carlballou/iStockBy EMILY SHAPIRO, AARON KATERKSY, ABC News

Human remains have been located at the site where a parked recreational vehicle exploded in downtown Nashville, Tennessee, on Christmas morning, in what Nashville police believe was an “intentional act.”

Multiple law enforcement sources tell ABC News that the remains have not been identified, and it was not immediately determined whether they are identifiable.

Nashville police officers were at first called to a report of shots fired. There was no evidence of shots fired, but “there were announcements coming” from an RV saying a potential bomb would detonate within 15 minutes, police said.

 

 

The bomb squad was called and the area was evacuated. Around 6:30 a.m., as the bomb squad responded, the RV exploded, blowing out the windows of nearby buildings and leaving extensive damage.

The explosion knocked one officer to the ground. Another officer sustained temporary hearing loss.

Three people were transported to the hospital with minor injuries. No significant injuries have been reported.

It’s not known whether anyone was in the RV when it exploded, authorities said.

Nashville International Airport said it was temporarily halting flights Friday afternoon “due to telecommunications issues” associated with the blast.

AT&T said service has been impacted in Nashville and surrounding areas because of damage to its facilities from the explosion.

Communications capabilities came back in the tower about an hour after the ground stop was issued and service resumed, the Federal Aviation Administration said.

Resident Buck McCoy said he heard gunshots before the explosion, which “blew everything all over the entire apartment.”

“All the windows came in from the living room into the bedroom,” he told ABC News. “There was glass everywhere from the windows. There wasn’t really any part of the apartment that wasn’t damaged or pushed or moved or affected by the explosion … the whole apartment was just completely a mess.”

“My building is pretty tall and pretty strong so it had to have been a very strong explosion to blow out all those windows,” he said.

Several buildings suffered structural damage, authorities said.

McCoy said he “started to go downstairs, saw some people in the hallway — they were in shock, you know, they’re crying.”

He then reached the street which he said looked “like a movie … it was just surreal.”

The debris field extends for at least a few blocks. Streets around the exploded vehicle have been closed down.

In the search for the suspect, there are “investigate leads to be pursued” and “technical work that needs to happen,” the FBI said.

“We will find out what happened here,” the FBI said.

Police have been sweeping the area with a K9 unit out of precaution, but Nashville Police Chief John Drake said there is no concern, and that “we know of no other imminent danger to the city at this point.”

President Donald Trump, President-elect Joe Biden, acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf, and acting Attorney General Jeff Rosen have been briefed on the incident.

The FBI is now the lead investigative agency.

Agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are responding.

This story is developing. Please check back for more updates.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Nashville police officers were at first called to a report of shots fired. There was no evidence of shots fired but police noticed a suspicious RV with no tags parked across from the Davidson County courthouse.

The bomb squad was called and around 6:30 a.m., as the bomb squad responded, the RV exploded, blowing out the windows of nearby buildings and leaving extensive damage.

Decorated Boston Celtics player, coach K.C. Jones dies at 88

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Photo by Rick Stewart/Getty Images(BOSTON) — Legendary Boston Celtics point guard and coach K.C. Jones has died at the age of 88, the team announced on Friday.

Jones played nine seasons in the NBA, all with the Boston Celtics, and won eight titles. Only Jones’ teammates Bill Russell (11) and Sam Jones (10) won more championships in their careers.

He later won three more titles (one as an assistant coach and two as a head coach) with Boston in the 1980s.

Jones was considered a particularly effective defender and a skilled playmaker.

”I just didn’t see how a man who shot as poorly as K.C. could stay in the NBA,” recalled Bob Cousy, the famed Celtics point guard whom Jones backed up initially and then replaced as a starter when “Cooz” retired in 1963. ”I really didn’t think his other skills would be enough to keep him around. But I was wrong. The man turned out to be amazing on defense and eventually learned to score enough so that rival teams couldn’t afford not to guard him.”

Jones’ number 25 is retired by the Celtics, and he was inducted into the Pro Basketball Hall of Fame in 1989.

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NHL expects Canadian teams to play home games this season

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JohnAlexandr/iStockBy LOUIS MILMAN, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — The NHL expects its Canadian teams to be able to play home games in their arenas this season, deputy commissioner Bill Daly said Thursday.

The league’s season is scheduled to start on January 13, after the NHL and the NHL Players’ Assoication reached a deal on a 56-game season. The playoffs would run until July, when the Stanley Cup would be awarded.

The format of the season will be unique, with four divisions — North, South, East and West — and all play confined within those divisions through the first two postseason rounds. That, in an effort to minimize travel and the potential for a COVID-19 outbreak to disrupt the season.

All seven Canadian teams will play in the North Division, meaning they would not have to cross the U.S.-Canada border, which is currently closed to non-essential travel into late January.

If needed, games could be played at neutral sites.

Last season, the NHL completed its playoffs in a pair of bubble environments in Toronto and Edmonton.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Two Alabama standouts among four Heisman Trophy finalists

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Photo by Phil Ellsworth / ESPN ImagesBy LOUIS MILMAN, ABC NEWS

(NEW YORK) — The finalists for the 2020 Heisman Trophy were announced last night, and a pair of teammates from Alabama both made the cut.

Quarterback Mac Jones and wide receiver DeVonta Smith are among the four finalists, joined by Clemson quarterback Trevor Lawrence and Florida QB Kyle Trask.

The award will be given out on January 5, during a virtual ceremony.

All four players have had spectacular seasons, but the voting is expected to be fairly close.

Smith led the nation with 98 catches, 1,511 receiving yards and 17 touchdown receptions. If he were to win the Heisman, he would be the first non-quarterback to do so since Alabama running back Derrick Henry in 2015. The last wide receiver to win was Michigan’s Desmond Howard in 1991.

Jones led the Crimson Tide to an undefeated regular season, and a berth in the College Football Playoff as the top seed. He is in his first full year as a starting quarterback, tossing 32 touchdowns to just four interceptions.

Lawrence, expected to be the top selection in the NFL Draft, has gone 34-1 as Clemson’s starter. He, too, led his team to a College Football Playoff berth, locking down the #2 seed.

And Trask set several school records while compiling one of the best years a Florida QB has ever had — registering 43 touchdown throws and more than 4,000 yards through the air.

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