June 2024 Climate Summary

June 2024 Climate Summary

Another Warm June, Precipitation Around Average

June 2024 checked in with an average temperature of 71.3°F and an average total precipitation of 3.84 inches, respectively. Temperatures were 3.0°F above the long-term average and precipitation was marginally above average. It was, however, the wettest June in six years. Temperatures were well-shy of record levels at the state level (record warmest was 76.6°F in 1933). But June 2024 continued a decadal trend toward June being warmer, a trend which has been even more pronounced in recent years. Of the past 10 years, only one (2019) was below the long-term average of 68.3°F. Nationally, it was the second-warmest June on record and it was the warmest June on record globally. It was the 13th consecutive month with record global temperatures.

Figure 1. June temperature and precipitation scatter plot.
Figure 2. June precipitation anomalies.
Figure 3. June temperature anomalies.

Floods and Drought

Precipitation was right around average statewide, but that is definitely not the whole story. Some areas in east-central and north-central Nebraska picked up excessive rainfall at times, particularly during the week of June 16-22 when stalled-out boundaries were a focal point for training thunderstorms. Areas most affected were between Dannebrog and Columbus on June 21 and up around O'Neill the day before.

Rainfall in June did bring drought relief to parts of eastern Nebraska, though some of the relief depicted on the change map dated July 2 did fall on July 1 into the early morning hours of July 2. Nevertheless, over the past year much of eastern Nebraska saw between 3 and 5 categories-worth of drought improvement.

Figure 4. Average temperatures for June 2024.
Figure 5. Temperature percentiles for June 2024.
Figure 6. Total precipitation for June 2024.
Figure 7. Precipitation percentiles for June 2024.

Where things did not improve was in parts of the Panhandle and the southwestern corner of Nebraska. The dryness of late spring in the western Panhandle carried into June and a large section of Scotts Bluff and Sioux counties (as well as sections of Dawes and Box Butte counties) saw 2-category degradation on the U.S. Drought Monitor into moderate drought. Portions of southwestern Nebraska between Imperial and North Platte technically didn't go into drought but did see abnormally dryness come in during the month of June. Heat toward the end of the month in this area also factored into the degradation.

Figure 8. Average temperatures by climate division June 2024.
Figure 9. June 2024 temperature anomalies.
Figure 10. June 2024 precipitation by climate division.
Figure 11.June 2024 precipitation anomalies by climate division.

Extremes and Tabular Summaries

Provided are PDFs containing Nebraska Mesonet station summaries, temperature/HDD/CDD, and precipitation summaries for stations around the state. Includes CoCoRaHS observer reports in the precipitation summary. Below are the temperature and precipitation extremes around the state in June.

  • Maximum Daily High Temperature: 106°F, Superior
  • Minimum Daily High Temperature: 61°F, Kilgore
  • Minimum Daily Low Temperature: 32°F, Chadron 3SW
  • Maximum Daily Low Temperature: 79°F, Auburn 5ESE
  • Maximum Monthly Precipitation: 10.77 inches, Central City 6.8 NNE
Figure 12. One-month change in the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Figure 13. One-year change in the U.S. Drought Monitor.
Figure 14. Storm reports June 2024.

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