cycloneye wrote:Climate Prediction Center 4/12/10 update
Data from the Climate Prediction Center's 4/12/10 update indicate that El Nino 3.4 area has falled to +0.8C,from the +1.0C number it was last week meaning that El Nino days are numbered.
Last Week Numbers
Niño 4= +0.9ºC
Nino 3.4=+1.0C
Niño 3= +0.9ºC
Niño1+2= +0.1ºC
This Week Numbers
Niño 4= +1.0ºC
Nino 3.4=+0.8C
Niño 3= +0.8ºC
Niño1+2= +0.4ºC
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/a ... ts-web.pdf
ENSO Updates (2007 thru 2023)
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Re: ENSO Updates=CPC 4/12/10 update=El Nino 3.4 below +1.0C
The threshold for el nino is a Nino 3.4 at or above +0.5C (averaged over 3 months)...but at the rate we are dropping, we could very well hit that initial, first enso neutral reading (range from -0.5C to +0.5C) by May.
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Re: ENSO Updates=CPC 4/12/10 update=El Nino 3.4 falls to +0.8C
El Nino is going down like the Niagara Falls. The Aussies are the same as CPC with the identical number +0.8C.


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Re: ENSO Updates=CPC 4/12/10 update=El Nino 3.4 falls to +0.8C
cycloneye wrote:El Nino is going down like the Niagara Falls. The Aussies are the same as CPC with the identical number +0.8C.
Netural and La Nina will be at our front doors before you know it at this pace.
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Re: ENSO Updates=30 day SOI Index continues to climb=+5.2
The SOI index in the daily ,30 and 90 days all continue to go up.The most important data is in the 30 day index that is making a great run upwards since April started.
http://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/Seaso ... SOIValues/

http://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/Seaso ... SOIValues/

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Re: ENSO Updates=30 day SOI Index continues to climb=+6.2
Guess what folks.the latest update tonight of the 30 day SOI climbs to +6.2.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
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Re: ENSO Updates=BoM 4/14/10 update=El Nino is breakingdown
Australian 4/14/10 update
Say goodbye to El Nino is the message in this update.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/
ENSO Wrap-Up: El Niño in breakdown cycle
Issued on Wednesday 14 April 2010 | Product Code IDCKGEWWOO
Sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific have continued to cool over the past fortnight, though remain above El Niño thresholds. Temperatures in all the main ENSO monitoring areas are now less than 1°C above normal, a situation which last occurred in late September 2009. Below the ocean surface, temperatures have also reduced. Cooler than normal conditions are now apparent below much of the equatorial Pacific, with a number of indicators at their lowest levels since March 2009.
In the atmosphere, the trade winds are near normal, while cloudiness near the date-line has reduced over the past month. The 30-day SOI value went positive in early April for the first time since September of last year, while its current value of +6.2 is the highest 30-day SOI since late June 2009.
The decline in the current El Niño event is consistent with climate model predictions which suggest Pacific Ocean temperatures will cool steadily over the coming months, returning to neutral levels by early winter 2010. As autumn is a typical transitional period for ENSO, model predictions of El Niño through and beyond autumn are generally less reliable than at other times of the year.

Say goodbye to El Nino is the message in this update.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/
ENSO Wrap-Up: El Niño in breakdown cycle
Issued on Wednesday 14 April 2010 | Product Code IDCKGEWWOO
Sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific have continued to cool over the past fortnight, though remain above El Niño thresholds. Temperatures in all the main ENSO monitoring areas are now less than 1°C above normal, a situation which last occurred in late September 2009. Below the ocean surface, temperatures have also reduced. Cooler than normal conditions are now apparent below much of the equatorial Pacific, with a number of indicators at their lowest levels since March 2009.
In the atmosphere, the trade winds are near normal, while cloudiness near the date-line has reduced over the past month. The 30-day SOI value went positive in early April for the first time since September of last year, while its current value of +6.2 is the highest 30-day SOI since late June 2009.
The decline in the current El Niño event is consistent with climate model predictions which suggest Pacific Ocean temperatures will cool steadily over the coming months, returning to neutral levels by early winter 2010. As autumn is a typical transitional period for ENSO, model predictions of El Niño through and beyond autumn are generally less reliable than at other times of the year.

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Subsurface really has cooled a lot in the last month..
As for cooling, looking at the current set-up the models prog we may see something of a stall for the next week or so, or at most a slight decline. Still its looking quite likely that by June we will be at neutral values.
As for cooling, looking at the current set-up the models prog we may see something of a stall for the next week or so, or at most a slight decline. Still its looking quite likely that by June we will be at neutral values.
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Re: ENSO Updates=BoM 4/14/10 update=El Nino in breakdown cycle
The Euro ENSO forecast of April shows no changes from the March one and that is Neutral to Weak La Nina by summer.
ECMWF April ENSO forecast
ECMWF April ENSO forecast
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Re: ENSO Updates=BoM 4/14/10 update=El Nino in breakdown cycle
Here is a contrast between the inactive period 1970-1994 and the active cycle starting in 1995.Even with Neutral and La Nina,the seasons in the inactive period were below to average for the most part.Neutral ENSO in that period saw the most above average seasons.
http://i.imwx.com/web/multimedia/images ... u2007.html
http://i.imwx.com/web/multimedia/images ... u2007.html
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Re: ENSO Updates
April update of all ENSO Models
Some models are on the warm neutral bias and others go to cold neutral bias.The rest that go way down are outliers.
http://iri.columbia.edu/climate/ENSO/cu ... table.html

Some models are on the warm neutral bias and others go to cold neutral bias.The rest that go way down are outliers.
http://iri.columbia.edu/climate/ENSO/cu ... table.html

Technical ENSO Update
15 April 2010
> Current conditions
> Expected conditions
Current Conditions
As of mid-April 2010, SSTs are still somewhat above-average throughout the central and most of the eastern equatorial Pacific, indicative of weak El Niño conditions. Moderate(+) El Niño conditions were observed from late-October until mid-February, due to the accumulated effects of intermittently strong westerly wind anomalies in the western and/or central Pacific. Both the traditional and the equatorial Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) were negative during that period, with the equatorial SOI most negative in January and February. Positive convection anomalies were observed in the vicinity of the dateline, most prominently between October and February. Between late January and early March convection anomalies became stronger, located near and just east of the dateline so as to efficiently influence the zonal and meridional atmospheric circulation patterns as observed during previous moderate to strong El Nino episodes. Equatorial Pacific oceanic heat content had been above-average since early in 2009, but became more strongly so beginning late October. During January and early February 2010 the heat content anomaly somewhat decreased, but remained well above average into mid-March due to a late-occurring westerly wind anomaly in the western and central equatorial Pacific. That relative pause in the depletion of anomalous sub-surface heat allowed for a continuation of positive SST anomalies through the end of March, resulting in only a slow decline in the strength of the El Niño with the progession of northern spring.
For March 2009, the SST anomaly in the NINO3.4 region was 1.14 C, sufficient to be classified as moderate El Niño conditions for this time of year. For the Dec-Jan-Feb season the anomaly was 1.32 degrees C. Currently the IRI's definition of El Niño conditions rests on an index of SST anomalies, averaged over the NINO3.4 region (5S-5N; 170W-120W), exceeding the warmest 25%-ile of the historical distribution, and similarly for La Niña relative to the 25%-ile coldest conditions in the historical distribution. The NINO3.4 anomaly necessary to qualify as La Niña or El Niño conditions for the Apr-May-Jun and the May-Jun-Jul seasons are approximately (-0.45C, 0.45) and (-0.50, 0.45), respectively.
Expected Conditions
The most recent weekly SST anomaly in the NINO3.4 region is 0.8 C, indicating weak El Niño conditions in the tropical Pacific, somewhat lower than the 1.14 C level observed in March. What is the outlook for the ENSO status going forward? Strongly positive convection anomalies near and just east of the dateline from late January to early March produced many of the historically observed teleconnected climate effects. However, the convection anomalies have decreased markedly over the last several weeks as both the oceanic and atmospheric indicators of El Niño weakened. April is the time of year when existing ENSO events are often in their final waning phase, if dissipation has not already ocurred. It seems most likely that this El Niño will persist at least through the remainder of April. However, a double-year event (such as what occurred in 1986-87-88) does not appear likely, as negative subsurface sea temperature anomalies, initially residing in the western tropical Pacific in February and March, have been expanding at depth into the central and east-central Pacific in the most recent weeks. Meanwhile, the downwelling Kelvin wave associated with the above-mentioned zonal wind anomalies in January and February is beginning to manifest itself in the far eastern tropical Pacific SSTs. Hence, the SST component of this El Niño may endure longest in the NINO1+2 index region, of greatest relevance to the near-coastal waters of northern Peru and Ecuador, in late April and early May.
Presently, the models and observations taken together indicate probabilities of about 38% for maintaining El Niño conditions and about 57% for dissipation to ENSO-neutral conditions for the Apr-May-June season in progress. Going forward, probabilities for El Niño decrease to approximately 28% by May-Jun-Jul, falling to 20% (just below the climatological probability of 25%) by Jun-Jul-Aug. Probabilities for La Niña conditions are predicted to be negligible until May-Jun-Jul, when they rise to 10%. By Jul-Aug-Sep, the probability for La Niña rises to 25% and during the later portion of 2010 the La Niña and El Niño probabilities become 35% and 10%, respectively.
The above assessment was made in part on the basis of an examination of the current forecasts of ENSO prediction models as well as the observed conditions. For purposes of this discussion, El Niño SST conditions are defined as SSTs in the NINO3.4 region being in the warmest 25% of their climatological distribution for the 3-month period in question over the 1950-present timeframe. The corresponding cutoff in terms of degrees C of SST anomaly varies seasonally, being close to 0.40 degrees C in boreal late-spring to early-summer season and as high as 0.75 degrees C in late boreal autumn. La Niña conditions are defined as NINO3.4 region SSTs being in the coolest 25% of the climatological distribution. Neutral conditions occupy the remaining 50% of the distribution. These definitions were developed such that the most commonly accepted El Niño and La Niña episodes are reproduced.
The models are in rough agreement in their ENSO forecasts for the first one or two seasons of the 10-month forecast period, but diverage considerably beginning in northern summer. The statistical and dynamical models agree in predicting a weakening and demise of El Niño conditions during the next 1 to 3 months, but the details of the rate of dissipation, and what happens following the dissipation, differ among models. For northern summer onward, some models predict warm-neutral ENSO, some neutral ENSO, some cool-neutral ENSO, and some La Nina. For the current Apr-May-Jun season, 45% of the models are predicting El Niño conditions. At lead times of 4 or more months into the future, statistical and dynamical models that incorporate information about the ocean's observed sub-surface thermal structure generally exhibit higher predictive skill than those that do not. Among models that do use sub-surface temperature information, 0 of 11 (0%) indicate El Niño conditions for the Sep-Oct-Nov season, 10 of 11 (91%) predict ENSO-neutral SSTs, and 1 of 11 (9%) predict La Niña conditions. (Note 1). (Note that La Niño conditions for Sep-Oct-Nov require a NINO3.4 SST anomaly of -0.75 or stronger.) Caution is advised in interpreting the distribution of model forecasts as the actual probabilities. At longer leads, the skill of the models degrades, and skill uncertainty must be convolved with the uncertainties from initial conditions and differing model physics, leading to more climatological probabilities in the long-lead ENSO Outlook than might be suggested by the suite of models. Furthermore, the expected skill of one model versus another has not been established using uniform validation procedures, which may cause a difference in the true probability distribution from that taken verbatim from the raw model predictions.
An alternative way to assess the probabilities of the three possible ENSO conditions is to use the mean of the forecasts of all models, and to construct a standard error function centered on that mean. The standard error would be Gaussian in shape, and would have its width determined by an estimate of overall expected model skill for the season of the year and the lead time. Higher skill would result in a relatively narrower error distribution, while low skill would result in an error distribution with width approaching that of the historical observed distribution. This method shows probabilities for El Niño at about 35% and 20% for Apr-May-Jun and May-Jun-Jul, respectively, declining to 12% by Jun-Jul-Aug and 10% from Jul-Aug-Sep onward into early 2011. Probabilities for La Niña increase to 30-35% from Jul-Aug-Sep onward through early 2011. The same cautions mentioned above for the distribution of model forecasts apply to this alternative method of inferring probabilities, due to differing model biases and skills. In particular, this approach considers only the mean of the predictions, and not the range across the models, nor the ensemble range within individual models.
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Re: ENSO Updates=April update of all ENSO models by IRI
Below is an illustration by Dr Jeff Masters of how things stand in terms of all the ENSO models and their future forecasts.

Discussion by Dr Jeff Masters about the actual conditions and future outlook.

Discussion by Dr Jeff Masters about the actual conditions and future outlook.
El Niño fades from moderate to weak
El Niño slowly weakened during late March and early April, and El Niño conditions crossed the threshold from moderate to weak during the past two weeks. Sea surface temperatures over the tropical Eastern Pacific in the area 5°N - 5°S, 120°W - 170°W, also called the "Niña 3.4 region", were at 0.83°C above average on April 11, which is just below the 1.0°C threshold to be considered a moderate El Niño, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. Anomalously strong westerly winds along the Equator that had helped maintain the current El Niño slackened in late March, and winds are now near average over the Equatorial Pacific. It now appears very likely that El Niño will be gone by hurricane season. None of the sixteen El Niño models (updated as of April 15) are predicting El Niño will be around during the height of hurricane season (August-September-October); six are predicting La Niña conditions for hurricane season. The expected demise of El Niño, coupled with sea surface temperatures in the tropical Atlantic that are currently at record levels, have prompted two major hurricane forecasting groups (tropicalstormrisk.com and Colorado State University) to predict a well-above average 2010 Atlantic hurricane season.
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Re: ENSO Updates=April update of all ENSO models by IRI
Latest IRI predictions, by peak season (ASO), 57% chance of enso neutral, 30% chance of la nina, and 13% chance of el nino.


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Re: ENSO Updates
When the peak of the season period arrives (August,September and October) it will be cold Neutral to Weak La Nina status according to the CFS model.


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Re: ENSO Updates
After a couple of days being flat,the 30 day SOI index shoots upwards again.
Daily SOI data
http://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/Seaso ... SOIValues/
Daily SOI text
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
20100310,20100408,0.4
20100311,20100409,1.3
20100312,20100410,2.9
20100313,20100411,5.2
20100314,20100412,6.2
20100315,20100413,6.6
20100316,20100414,6.4
20100317,20100415,6.2
20100318,20100416,7.9

Daily SOI data
http://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/Seaso ... SOIValues/
Daily SOI text
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
20100310,20100408,0.4
20100311,20100409,1.3
20100312,20100410,2.9
20100313,20100411,5.2
20100314,20100412,6.2
20100315,20100413,6.6
20100316,20100414,6.4
20100317,20100415,6.2
20100318,20100416,7.9

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Re: ENSO Updates=30 day SOI index continues to move up
+8.4 in tonight's update on the 30 day SOI.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
20100318,20100416,7.9
20100319,20100417,8.4
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
20100318,20100416,7.9
20100319,20100417,8.4
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Re: ENSO Updates=CPC 4/19/10 update=El Nino 3.4 at +0.8C
Climate Prediction Center 4/19/10 update
The most important area of ENSO,El Nino 3.4 stayed at the same number as last week's update +0.8C.The most impressive data is at El Nino 1-2 where it shoots up from +0.4C to +1.1C.That is the result of the last kevin wave which caused the warm waters to go up to the surface there.
Last Week Numbers
Niño 4= +1.0ºC
Nino 3.4= +0.8C
Niño 3= +0.8ºC
Niño1+2= +0.4ºC
This Week Numbers
Niño 4= +0.8ºC
Niño 3.4= +0.8ºC
Niño 3= +0.8ºC
Niño 1+2= +1.1ºC
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/a ... ts-web.pdf

The most important area of ENSO,El Nino 3.4 stayed at the same number as last week's update +0.8C.The most impressive data is at El Nino 1-2 where it shoots up from +0.4C to +1.1C.That is the result of the last kevin wave which caused the warm waters to go up to the surface there.
Last Week Numbers
Niño 4= +1.0ºC
Nino 3.4= +0.8C
Niño 3= +0.8ºC
Niño1+2= +0.4ºC
This Week Numbers
Niño 4= +0.8ºC
Niño 3.4= +0.8ºC
Niño 3= +0.8ºC
Niño 1+2= +1.1ºC
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/a ... ts-web.pdf

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Re: ENSO Updates=CPC 4/19/10 update=El Nino 3.4 at +0.8C
Once the last gas of the past kevin wave that caused the warm subsurface dissipates west of Southamerica,the cool waters will take over and we can then say "hasta la vista El Nino". It may take until late May or June for those cool subsurface waters to reach the surface.


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Re: ENSO Updates=30 day SOI index keeps moving up
It has been an impressive upwards run of the 30 day SOI index since April 8 when it turned positive and is not stopping yet,tonight up to +10.7.
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
20100310,20100408,0.4
20100311,20100409,1.3
20100312,20100410,2.9
20100313,20100411,5.2
20100314,20100412,6.2
20100315,20100413,6.6
20100316,20100414,6.4
20100317,20100415,6.2
20100318,20100416,7.9
20100319,20100417,8.4
20100320,20100418,9.6
20100321,20100419,10.7
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.txt
20100310,20100408,0.4
20100311,20100409,1.3
20100312,20100410,2.9
20100313,20100411,5.2
20100314,20100412,6.2
20100315,20100413,6.6
20100316,20100414,6.4
20100317,20100415,6.2
20100318,20100416,7.9
20100319,20100417,8.4
20100320,20100418,9.6
20100321,20100419,10.7
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Re: ENSO Updates=30 day SOI index keeps moving up=+10.7
The warm waters that the kevin wave brought is being squezzed by the cooler waters from the north and south.


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Re: ENSO Updates=30 day SOI index keeps moving up=+10.7
According to Long Paddock, today's contribution was +20.55, bringing the 30 day average to +11.75, and the 90 day average to -7.27 (The last 24 days have had positive values)
http://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/Seaso ... SOIValues/
I think the next month and a half is going to see a fairly rapid collapse of El Nino as the cooler subsurface waters reach the surface.
http://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/Seaso ... SOIValues/
I think the next month and a half is going to see a fairly rapid collapse of El Nino as the cooler subsurface waters reach the surface.
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