Kamchatka Storm Warning and Petersburg Cold: A Winter Update

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Over the last day, St. Petersburg faced record-breaking cold that set a new benchmark for January 3. The city’s weather outlook has been tracked by Alexander Kolesov, the chief meteorologist whose updates have become a go-to source for residents and observers alike.

At the moment, St. Petersburg recorded two striking temperature milestones for January 3. Never before had the city seen an average daily air temperature this low on the date, slipping to minus 22.2 degrees Celsius. This marks the coldest January 3 in the city’s recorded history, as noted by Kolesov in his communications.

Kolesov also highlighted that the previous January 3 record stood at minus 20.4 degrees, set in 2003. He explained that temperature records in this region can be revisited, with a separate reading of minus 34 degrees Celsius previously documented in the northeast portion of the Leningrad region, underscoring how extreme conditions can recur in nearby areas even when local measurements shift.

In related weather developments, the Central Federal District has already faced forecasts of frost to severe levels, with temperatures suggested to dip to minus 35 degrees in some areas. The broad pattern indicates a chain of intense cold spanning multiple regions, prompting careful preparations for residents and services alike.

Separately, authorities have issued warnings in Kamchatka about a storm, signaling another facet of an unusually active winter weather pattern across different parts of Russia. The juxtaposition of record cold in one region and stormy conditions in another underscores the wide variability that winter brings to diverse climates.

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