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It may be mid-summer, but a polar invasion is forecast to blast much of the United States this weekend.

By sunrise Saturday, the mercury is expected to tumble into the 40s (sub 10C) across much of Upstate New York — such readings would break or at least near all-time low-temperature records for the final day of July.

The city of Binghamton is forecast to reach 47F (8.3C) and usurp its previous July 31 benchmark by a full 2 degrees Fahrenheit, according to National Weather Service (NWS) data.

Other nearby cities could be on the brink of a cold record, too:

Syracuse is expected to reach 50F (10C) — just 2F off the old record set in way back in 1965 (solar minimum of cycle 19).

And Albany also has a chance of breaking it’s July 31 low of 49F (9.4C).

The entire Northeast is incredibly cold right now, and records have already been tumbling: according to coolwx.com, a total of 9 daily low temperature records fell across the region over the past 24 hours alone:

This Northeast being so frigid right now is explained, paradoxically, by the West being hot.

This chilly setup has been around a number of days now, and it is expected to extend into next week.

There has been much made of Upstate New York’s warmer-than-average July, but putting it into perspective, Binghamton’s toasty summer -so far- doesn’t even see it enter the top 20, while Buffalo is only on for its ninth warmest July — these are hardly signs of the AGW catastrophe the MSM is always so keen to associate with any reading above average.

And now, as highlighted above, we have record summer COLD invading the region.

Such chills are typical of early October, not late July– and they aren’t just confined to the Northeast either, far from it.

South Dakota was forecast temperature departures 20C below the average overnight Friday (see GFS run below), meaning cold records will almost certainly have tumbled here, too:

And looking elsewhere, and further ahead, the majority of the CONUS can expect below average lows well into next month…

It may be mid-summer, but a polar invasion is forecast to blast much of the United States this weekend. By sunrise Saturday, the mercury is expected to tumble into the 40s (sub 10C) across much of Upstate New York — such readings would break or at least near all-time low-temperature records for the final day of July. The city of Binghamton is forecast to reach 47F (8.3C) and usurp its previous July 31 benchmark by a full 2 degrees Fahrenheit, according to National Weather Service (NWS) data. Other nearby cities could be on the brink of a cold record, too: Syracuse is expected to reach 50F (10C) — just 2F off the old record set in way back in 1965 (solar minimum of cycle 19). And Albany also has a chance of breaking it’s July 31 low of 49F (9.4C). The entire Northeast is incredibly cold right now, and records have already been tumbling: according to coolwx.com, a total of 9 daily low temperature records fell across the region over the past 24 hours alone: This Northeast being so frigid right now is explained, paradoxically, by the West being hot. This chilly setup has been around a number of days now, and it is expected to extend into next week. There has been much made of Upstate New York’s warmer-than-average July, but putting it into perspective, Binghamton’s toasty summer -so far- doesn’t even see it enter the top 20, while Buffalo is only on for its ninth warmest July — these are hardly signs of the AGW catastrophe the MSM is always so keen to associate with any reading above average. And now, as highlighted above, we have record summer COLD invading the region. Such chills are typical of early October, not late July– and they aren’t just confined to the Northeast either, far from it. South Dakota was forecast temperature departures 20C below the average overnight Friday (see GFS run below), meaning cold records will almost certainly have tumbled here, too: And looking elsewhere, and further ahead, the majority of the CONUS can expect below average lows well into next month…

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