Back to homeScienceArchive

Science | Europe

April 2026 Was the Hottest March Ever for the US Lower 48 — And El Niño Is Making It Worse

| 2 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
April 2026 Was the Hottest March Ever for the US Lower 48 — And El Niño Is Making It Worse
San Photography pexels

Federal data shows that March 2026 was the hottest March on record for the Lower 48 United States, by the largest margin any month has ever exceeded its record. An incoming El Niño is expected to push temperatures even higher. Here is the complete climate picture and what it means for 2026.

A Record That Broke Its Own Category

CBS News reported among its April 17 briefing items that 'last month was the hottest March on record for the Lower 48 states, by the most for any month ever, federal data shows.' The specific compounding of records embedded in that sentence requires parsing: this was not just the hottest March on record, but the month that exceeded its own previous record by the largest margin of any month in recorded US temperature history. No other calendar month has beaten its prior record by as large a gap.

The federal data source is the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's temperature monitoring network, which covers the contiguous 48 states with the specific geographic density and historical depth that makes month-by-month temperature record comparisons meaningful. NOAA's climate monitoring function is the particular institutional foundation for claims about temperature records — its data is the specific scientific bedrock that climate reporting relies on.

The specific magnitude of the margin by which March 2026 exceeded its previous record has not been reported numerically in the available CBS coverage — the framing 'by the most for any month ever' conveys the scale without a specific number. The practical implications for American consumers: a March that broke its record by an unprecedented margin creates the specific spring season conditions whose downstream effects appear in agricultural growing patterns, water availability from winter snowpack, cooling cost projections for summer, and the particular biological systems — wildfire risk, insect populations, disease vector distributions — whose calibration to specific seasonal temperature norms creates cascading effects when those norms are exceeded.

El Niño and the 2026 Summer Outlook

CBS News also reported that 'a forecast El Niño could heat Earth even more' — a specific additive climate factor whose combination with the underlying warming trend that produced the March record creates the particular 2026 summer outlook whose implications for drought, wildfire, extreme heat events, and hurricane season are being actively modeled by NOAA and other federal climate agencies.

El Niño — the specific Pacific Ocean warming pattern that influences global atmospheric circulation and shifts precipitation and temperature patterns across much of the globe — historically increases global average temperatures during its active phase, particularly in the Northern Hemisphere's summer and fall. In combination with a baseline that is already breaking records by unprecedented margins, El Niño's specific additive effect creates the particular uncertainty range in 2026 summer temperature projections that emergency management, agricultural planning, and energy grid operators are managing simultaneously.

The Colorado State University 2026 hurricane season forecast, also reported by CBS on April 17, predicted 13 named storms and six hurricanes — a forecast that, in combination with the specific FEMA funding backlog reported separately, describes an alignment of elevated hurricane risk and reduced federal emergency response capacity that emergency management experts have described as particularly concerning.

#Science#Europe#US#April#Hottest March Ever#Lower#And El Niño#Is Making It#Record#March#Hottest#Month
More in ScienceBrowse full archive

Comments

0 comments
Checking account...
480 characters left
Loading comments...

Related coverage

Science
AI Chatbots and Mental Health: A New Medical Study Says Doctors Need to Start Asking Their Patients a New Question
## The Question That Doctors Aren't Asking When a patient comes to a doctor or psychiatrist for a mental health assessme...
Science
The Artemis II Crew Said They Are 'Bonded Forever' — Their First Full Interview After Coming Home Reveals Everything
## Four Astronauts Who Went to the Moon and Came Back Changed Ten days in a pressurized capsule traveling 252,760 miles ...
Science
The Artemis II Crew Said 'Bonded Forever' — Here Is Their Full First Interview After Coming Home
The Artemis II crew spoke publicly for the first time since returning from the Moon. Here is every significant thing the...
Science
Artemis II Splashed Down 'Textbook' Perfect — Here Is the Complete Story of What Those 13 Minutes Were Like
At 8:07 PM Eastern on April 10, 2026, Artemis II splashed down 'textbook perfect' in the Pacific Ocean. Here is the comp...
Science
The Orion Capsule's 695,000-Mile Journey: A Timeline of Everything That Happened
Artemis II's Orion traveled 695,081 miles in 10 days. Here is the complete day-by-day timeline of the mission — every re...
Science
The Orion Heat Shield Controversy: Why a Former Astronaut Said NASA Shouldn't Have Launched
Former NASA astronaut Charlie Camarda warned in January that Artemis II should not launch with the known heat shield fla...

More stories

Entertainment
Sylvester Stallone Is Getting a Biopic and the Rocky Director Is Making It — Here Is Everything About 'I Play Rocky'
Technology
Reese Witherspoon Says It's Time for Women to Embrace AI and She Wants to Learn With You — Here Is Her Vision
Entertainment
Tom Cruise's New Film 'Digger' Made CinemaCon 2026 Stop — Here Is What the Grand Entrance Revealed
Entertainment
Karol G's Coachella Weekend 2 Set Made History Twice in the Same Evening — Here Is What Happened
World
The US Just Sent a Diplomatic Delegation to Cuba for the First Time in Years — Here Is What Changed
Entertainment
Zendaya Is 'Disappearing' From Public Life After 2026 — Here Is What's Actually Happening
Entertainment
Michael B. Jordan Is Starring in 'The Thomas Crown Affair' Remake — Here Is Why This Casting Is Perfect
Entertainment
Demi Moore Just Joined Charlize Theron and Julia Garner in a New Amazon MGM Thriller — Here Is Everything About 'Tyrant'
World
Chicago O'Hare Is Cutting 2026 Summer Flights — Here Is Why This Affects Every American Traveler
Military
Ukraine's Long-Range Strikes Into Russia Are Prompting New Threats Against Europe — What's Happening
Entertainment
Henry Cavill's Highlander Reboot Showed First Footage at CinemaCon — Here Is Every Detail
Sports
Azzi Fudd Was the #1 WNBA Draft Pick and She Is Reuniting With Paige Bueckers — Here Is What It Means for the League