Record-breaking fall warmth is shifting U.S. energy use, agriculture timing, and economic planning, and scientists say it is part of a long-term climate pattern. Across the United States, it’s late fall, close to winter and parts of the country are still having afternoons that feel more like late spring. Allergy season has been prolonged. Some treat this as a passing weather oddity. Scientists say it reflects a measurable trend called “seasonal drift.”
Fall Is Arriving Later
This October ranked among the warmest ever recorded in the Northern Hemisphere, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Service. Several U.S. regions experienced persistent warmth. The Midwest had one of its warmest early fall periods on record, with states like Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin reporting delayed frost by up to three weeks. The Northeast also recorded warmer nights, with October overnight lows nearly eight degrees above long-term averages in parts of Pennsylvania and New York. In the Southeast, Atlanta and Birmingham experienced more than 20 days above 80 degrees in October. In the West, Oregon and Washington saw an unusually warm and dry October that slowed the onset of seasonal cooling.
These observations align with long-term warming trends. NASA reports that the last decade has been the warmest on record. Each of the last twelve months ranked among the warmest for that month globally. Seasonal warming now appears as one of the most visible ways people experience climate change.
What Scientists Mean by “Seasonal Drift”
Seasonal drift describes an ongoing shift in the timing and behavior of the seasons caused by rising temperatures. For fall, this means cooler weather arrives later and the boundary between summer and fall becomes less clear. A study published in Nature Climate Change found that spring is arriving earlier by roughly two and a half days per decade. Fall is also starting later, and the growing season is now more than two weeks longer in many regions compared to the 1970s.
Dr. Frederic Bertley, president and CEO of the Center of Science and Industry (COSI), explains that the current “out-of-sync” feeling is rooted in delayed cooling and unusually warm land and ocean surfaces. “Elevated land and ocean surface temperatures retain heat longer, delaying the onset of cooler conditions that typically mark the start of autumn,” he says. “We’re seeing summerlike conditions persist further into autumn, trees changing later, birds migrating later, and even a second season of budding in some northern areas. All of these changes contribute to the perception that the season is fundamentally out of rhythm.”
Bertley adds that this shift is part of a long-term trend. “Fall arrives later, winters are warmer, and spring shows up early,” he notes. “While variations in seasons are normal, this drift is tied to long-term climate warming. It reflects a systematic pattern rather than a temporary fluctuation.”
Why This Fall Is So Warm
Ocean temperatures play a central role. The world’s oceans absorb most of the excess heat trapped by greenhouse gases. This year, sea surface temperatures remained at record highs in both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Warm water transfers heat to the atmosphere and delays the development of typical fall cooling.
Bertley explains that oceans act as the planet’s thermostat. “The ocean covers about 90 percent of the planet and is our biggest heat absorber,” he says. “When oceans become oversaturated with heat, their ability to take in more heat diminishes, and they deflect warm air back into the atmosphere and over land. This creates marine heatwaves that drive record-setting temperatures on land.”
El Niño has amplified those effects. During El Niño events, warmer Pacific waters alter global circulation patterns. The National Weather Service reports that El Niño years typically bring warmer fall temperatures to the northern United States. Meanwhile, a slower, more erratic jet stream, linked by researchers to rapid Arctic warming, has allowed warm air to linger over North America for longer stretches.
Economic Implications of a Warmer Fall
Seasonal drift affects energy use, agriculture, insurance, and business operations. Warmer falls reduce early heating demand, which utility companies reported in several regions this year. However, a delayed start to the heating season can compress energy use into a shorter period, driving higher bills once colder weather sets in.
Agriculture also relies on predictable seasons. Farmers in Indiana and Ohio reported late soybean harvests this year. Apple orchards in New York experienced uneven ripening due to warm nights. In Georgia, pecan growers reported late nut drops, which slowed production. Shifting seasons introduce more variability into farming and increase costs related to storage and spoilage.
Bertley emphasizes that “the effects of delayed seasonal change are widespread and already apparent across industries. Farmers rely on predictable seasons, and when those timelines shift, it throws off supply chains. In the energy sector, prolonged heat increases demand for cooling and costs. Even retail, tourism, and outdoor events are affected. These shifts highlight how delayed seasonal patterns influence not only the environment but also economic planning, public health, and social systems.”
He also points to the growing environmental footprint of artificial intelligence infrastructure, noting that “AI data centers require massive energy and water for cooling, and their expansion is beginning to have its own environmental impact.”
Insurance firms are adapting as well. Seasonal shifts complicate risk models and increase exposure. Higher fall temperatures place additional wear on cooling systems in commercial buildings, while delayed harvests affect crop insurance outcomes. The Insurance Information Institute reports that changing seasonal baselines are influencing how risk is priced across agriculture, construction, and energy.
Understanding the Difference Between Weather and Climate
Seasonal drift is widely felt but often misunderstood. People sense the change in their daily lives yet attribute it to short-term weather. Bertley uses a simple analogy: “If you need an umbrella, that’s weather. If your trees are budding again in September, that’s climate change.”
He explains that humans are not naturally good at perceiving scale. “Year-over-year incremental changes can feel negligible, but over decades those small shifts accumulate into profound effects on ecosystems and daily life.” He often relies on visuals to help audiences connect the data to experience: “Showing a glacier that has disappeared or a coral reef that has bleached helps people link the numbers to reality.”
Planning for a New Seasonal Future
Scientists do not expect seasonal drift to reverse soon. Even if greenhouse gas emissions decline, existing warming will continue to influence seasonal timing. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects ongoing fall warming in North America through mid-century.
Bertley says preparation must be collaborative and proactive. “Schools can integrate more climate literacy so students understand the science behind what they’re seeing,” he says. “City planners can design buildings and infrastructure that account for hotter conditions. Healthcare systems should prepare for longer allergy seasons and more heat-related illnesses.” He adds that planning must also include industry, technology, and policy: “AI, legislation, agriculture, deforestation, and transportation are all interconnected. Education and adaptation strategies need to reflect this larger ecosystem.” Seasonal drift is not abstract. It shapes crops, energy bills, business cycles, and everyday routines.
