
Polar Blast and Tropical Deluge: A Hemisphere of Weather Extremes
A late-autumn polar outbreak chills Argentina and Brazil while Texas braces for flooding, Europe sees an early heatwave, and Moscow endures unseasonable cold and rain.
A dramatic split in hemispheric weather patterns is unfolding as the week begins, with a powerful polar air mass plunging deep into South America while tropical moisture threatens flooding in North America and an African anticyclone bakes southern Europe. In Argentina, the national meteorological service has issued yellow alerts for extreme cold across Buenos Aires and six other provinces, with minimums forecast to drop to -2°C in the capital’s suburbs and as low as 5°C in Tucumán by Sunday. Meteorologists in Buenos Aires describe the event as a “ciclogénesis” — the formation of a low-pressure system that is pulling frigid air northward while simultaneously trapping unseasonable warmth over Patagonia, a pattern that could break historical temperature records for June.
That same frontal boundary, advancing as a cold front over southeastern Brazil, has triggered heavy rainfall and a sharp temperature drop in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, and Belo Horizonte. São Paulo awoke to voluminous overnight rain and a maximum of just 15°C, while more than 150 municipalities in Minas Gerais were placed under a storm alert for hail and winds up to 60 km/h. Further north, the Amazonian cities of Belém and Manaus face daily downpours with humidity pushing the heat index past 36°C, illustrating how the same large-scale circulation is delivering both wintry chill and tropical deluge across the continent.
North of the equator, the focus shifts to Texas, where a surge of tropical moisture from the Gulf of Mexico is generating persistent heavy rain and flash flood warnings across a swath from Austin to San Antonio. The US National Weather Service warns that a prolonged episode of rainfall could trigger dangerous rises in creeks and urban waterways, with some areas already reporting inundations. In neighbouring Mexico, the city of Monterrey saw streets turn to rivers after intense afternoon storms, while Mexico City activated a yellow alert for hail and up to 30 mm of rain in eight boroughs. The contrast is sharp: Los Angeles basks under clear skies and 28°C, while New York endures a day of drenching rain and Miami sweats through a 34°C heat index made worse by high humidity.
Across the Atlantic, Europe is experiencing its own divergence. An expanding subtropical high — the so-called African anticyclone — is set to push temperatures well above 40°C in Italy by the weekend, with forecasters in Rome warning of a prolonged stable phase that will erase rainfall and drive heat stress. Moscow, by contrast, is shivering through a week of May-like chill, with daytime highs struggling to reach 20°C and overnight lows of 8-13°C. Specialists at the Russian Hydrometcentre expect up to half of June’s normal monthly rainfall to fall in just six days, accompanied by thunderstorms, hail, and squally winds. Further east, the Indian monsoon has advanced into Andhra Pradesh and West Bengal, while Indonesian authorities warn of heavy rain and possible thunderstorms across Sumatra, Java, and Sulawesi.
Viewed from a global perspective, the simultaneous extremes reflect a blocked atmospheric configuration, where stubborn high-pressure ridges and deep troughs are locking weather systems in place. For the Southern Hemisphere, the early arrival of polar air presages a harsh start to winter, with frosts already reported in Paraná, Brazil, and further cold snaps likely. In the north, the combination of tropical moisture and stagnant patterns raises the risk of prolonged flooding in Texas and the US Gulf Coast, even as Europe braces for what could be the first major heatwave of the summer. The week ahead will test infrastructure and public health systems across multiple continents, a reminder that seasonal transitions are increasingly arriving not as gentle shifts but as jarring meteorological shocks.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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A polar cold wave is hitting South America, with anomalous temperatures and frosts breaking historical records. National weather services have issued yellow alerts for extreme cold, wind, and snow in several regions, as a cyclogenesis event intensifies the temperature drop. Overcast skies, rain, and a gradual improvement are expected only by midweek.
A new extreme heat wave is about to hit Europe, fueled by a massive African anticyclone that will stabilize the weather and push temperatures well above climatic averages. The coming weekend will open the way to a long phase of stable heat and no precipitation. Temperatures will return to exceptional levels, with Sahara-like values affecting the Mediterranean basin.
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