Shell Mound wrote:The MDR has recently cooled down significantly, despite a near-neutral NAO. The expansion of the Hadley cells due to climate change may mean that even a neutral or negative NAO may yield relatively stronger easterlies over the MDR than in the past, particularly during the height of late summer or early fall, as wavelengths also lengthen seasonally. So, contrary to popular expectations, the MDR may not warm substantially or even cool down quite a bit between now and the peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, depending in part on the state of the NAO. We do know that climate change tends to promote greater stability over the MDR, due in part to the expansion of the Hadley cells, but also related to the warming of the subtropical as well as the tropical North Atlantic, given that the subtropics tend to warm up even faster than the tropics, at least in the Atlantic basin. Overall, the NAO and climate change, along with the absence of La Niña by ASO, may serve to temper not just overall numbers in 2020, but also ACE and the risk of landfalls, given a weaker -PDO signature during neutral ENSO vs. La Niña.
This is exactly why I’ve been saying the Spring Barrier could change things. Hopefully it continues to cool and we have a quiet Atlantic Hurricane Season.