Summer 2023 in the U.S. has started with deadly heat and dangerous air as heat domes and wildfire effects plague tens of millions of Americans.

Get used to it, experts say, as both the heat and the smoke are likely here to stay.

Thanks to the ongoing wildfires in Canada, which show no sign of ending, smoky air is set to be a regular, periodic occurrence down here in the U.S. throughout the rest of the summer, experts said.

“As long as those fires keep burning up there, that’s going to be a problem for us,” said Weather Prediction Center forecast operations chief Greg Carbin. “As long as there’s something to burn, there will be smoke we have to deal with.”

And as for the heat, if you’re sick of it already, there’s not much relief in sight: Federal forecasters are predicting a warmer-than-average summer for most of the country.

Smoke risk not likely to ease soon, thanks to stuck pattern

An unusually persistent, stuck weather pattern, which continues to periodically funnel foul, smoke-filled air over U.S. cities from Chicago to Washington, shows no sign of changing or letting up.

“While the fires are ongoing, you can expect to see these periodic bad air days,” said University of Chicago atmospheric scientist Liz Moyer. “And the only relief is either when the fires go out or when the weather pattern dies.”

In addition, the wildfire forecast from Canada remains grim: Current projections indicate the potential for continued “higher-than-normal fire activity across most of the country throughout the 2023 wildland fire season, due to ongoing drought and long-range forecasts for warm temperatures,” according to Natural Resources Canada.

The national temperature outlook for the months of July, August and September. Most of the U.S. should see a warmer-than-average summer, especially along the East and West Coasts and across the southern tier of the nation, forecasters say.

Hot forecast for the rest of summer 2023

A hot summer also seems likely, meteorologists say.

Specifically, above-normal temperatures are expected throughout a majority of the U.S. during July, August and September, according to Climate Prediction Center meteorologist Brad Pugh.

Pugh said the highest probabilities of above-normal temperatures are forecast across parts of California, the Pacific Northwest, the Great Basin, the Southwest, the Gulf Coast and the East. No parts of the country are expected to see cooler-than-average temperatures for the next three months, he said.

Heat wave easing in the South, for now

The deadly heat that has scorched Texas for weeks now has finally eased, forecasters said, but with the nation entering the hottest month of the year this weekend, the heat is far from over.

“It’s relief from the extreme heat,” National Weather Service meteorologist Bryan Jackson said. “It’s not really an end to a heat wave; it’s just an end to the extreme part of the heat wave.”