Snowfall has been such a rare commodity in recent years that NOAA’s annual snowfall average for Washington, D.C. decreased when the climate records were recently updated. This past winter NOAA updated its climate records to reflect the 30-year period of 1991-2020, replacing the previous data set from 1981-2010. Since four of the last five winters had below average snowfall, D.C.’s annual snowfall average decreased from 15.4” to 13.7” in NOAA’s updated weather averages.
Last winter, for example, had below average snowfall with a seasonal total of only 5.4”. January 2019 was the last time D.C. residents had a daily snowfall of more than 5”. 2018-2019 was the only winter in the last five years D.C. finished with above average snowfall.
D.C. residents haven’t had much snow in December either over the last decade. December used to be D.C.’s third snowiest month of the year, but has since been replaced by March. March has been the only month in the last decade that Washingtonians often had above average snowfall, with five such occurrence since 2011. Consequently, D.C.’s March snowfall average increased from 1.3” to 2.0”. Meanwhile, Washingtonians haven’t had so much as an inch of December snowfall since 2017.
Winters tend to be cyclical in the DC Metro Area, with several snowier than average seasons followed by some that feature below average snowfall. Washingtonians experienced three consecutive snowier than average winters between 2013-2014 and 2015-2016 for the first time since the late 1970s. However, the last few years have been disappointing for D.C. Area winter weather enthusiasts with only scant amounts of snowfall.
A lot of attention is given to seasonal weather forecasts that discuss whether temperatures and precipitation will be above or below average. A key factor meteorologists look at when issuing winter weather outlooks is the ENSO status that refers to the presence of El Nino, La Nina or neither.
NOAA’s winter weather outlook for the DC Metro Area is for warmer than average temperatures with near average precipitation. Irrespective of the overall seasonal weather outlook, the right ingredients only need to come together once to create a significant winter weather event. That’s what happened during the 2015-2016 winter that included D.C.’s warmest December on record. However, there was a major shift in the weather pattern in January 2016 when DC’s fourth largest snowstorm on record occurred. Stay tuned to my colleagues and I on the WUSA9 Weather Team for changes in the evolving forecast on winter weather for this season.
Last 1” of Snow (Source: National Weather Service)
Reagan National Airport (DCA): 2.3” (January 31, 2021)
Dulles International Airport, Sterling, Virginia (IAD): 1.0” (February 18, 2021)
Last 5” of Snow
DCA: 8.3” (January 13, 2019)
IAD: 7.7” (January 13, 2019)
Last 10” of Snow
DCA: 11.3” (January 23, 2016)
IAD: 22.1” (January 23, 2016)
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