WORLD WEATHER HIGHLIGHTS FOR JULY 24, 2023
- Northwestern U.S. Corn and Soybean production areas will be dry biased this week, but will begin seeing some rain this weekend and next week; the hottest weather should abate as well after this workweek
- Central and southern parts of Canada’s Prairies will continue dry and very warm to hot for a while this week
- Some cooling is expected, but the drier than usual bias will prevail in Saskatchewan, eastern and southern Alberta and southwestern Manitoba into the weekend
- Some rain is possible in the driest areas next week
- Texas and southern Oklahoma will be dry and warm to hot for the next ten days
- A good mix of weather is likely in the U.S. southeastern states during the next ten days while the Delta dries out
- Hot and dry weather will continue in the far western U.S. for a while
- No change in drought conditions will occur in Argentina over the next ten days
- Good harvest conditions will continue in Brazil corn and cotton areas over the coming week to ten days
- Northern Europe will trend wetter over the next two weeks easing long term dryness in many areas
- Southern Europe dryness will continue near the Mediterranean Sea over the next two weeks while temperatures are seasonably warm
- CIS crop weather will be good for summer crops, but net drying is expected from Russia’s Southern Region into Kazakhstan
- China will see two typhoons impact the eastern part of the nation in the next two weeks which may leave central through northwestern crop areas a little too dry
- Typhoon Doksuri will reach Fujian Wednesday and move northward into Anhui and Jiangsu late this week
- A second storm will form near Guam this week and reach east-central China next week
- Heavy rain fell in northeastern China again during the weekend keeping the ground excessively wet in some areas
- India will stay plenty wet, if not too wet, over the next two weeks
- Australia winter crops near the southern coast will be in good shape for the next two weeks, but more rain is needed
- Super Typhoon Doksuri is expected to evolve today and Tuesday as it moves between Luzon Island, Philippines and Taiwan before moving into Fujian, China later this week
- There are no tropical cyclones other than Tropical Storm Don in the Atlantic Ocean Basin and Don will not impact land