As determined by the ONI (Oceanic Nino Index = 3 month running mean of SST anomalies in the Nino 3.4 region), the threshold for weak el nino (anything greater than or equal to 0.5C is considered el nino for ONI reading, enso neutral are readings from -0.5C to +0.5C) was first met in the summer of 2004
ONI Values from 2004:Dec03-Jan04-Feb04 = 0.4 (enso neutral)
Jan-Feb-Mar = 0.3 (enso neutral)
Feb-Mar-Apr = 0.2 (enso neutral)
Mar-Apr-May = 0.2 (enso neutral)
Apr-May-Jun = 0.3 (enso neutral)
May-Jun-Jul = 0.5 (el nino threshold just met)Jun-Jul-Aug = 0.7 (weak el nino)
Jul-Aug-Sep = 0.8 (weak el nino)
Aug-Sep-Oct = 0.9 (weak el nino)
Sep-Oct-Nov = 0.8 (weak el nino)
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/a ... ts-web.pdfI will always remember this update from Dr. Gray in early August 2004 in which he reduced his remainder of season forecast for the '04 season (mid-season update). Excerpt from that update:
Factors currently observed that lead us to believe that Atlantic hurricane activity in 2004 will be reduced are as follows:
*Enhancement of warm ENSO conditions - especially in the Nino 4 and Nino 3.4 regions
*Stronger-than-average trade winds across the equatorial Atlantic - resulting in generally increased wind shear across the main development region
*Strong 200 mb easterly anomalies in the eastern equatorial Pacific - typically associated with warm ENSO conditions and reduced Atlantic seasonal activity
Consequently, based on these mixed climate signals, we are reducing our forecast somewhat from our early April and late May updates; however, we are not reducing the forecasts as much as suggested by the sum of our monthly forecasts. http://hurricane.atmos.colostate.edu/Fo ... 4/aug2004/A week later, the parade of Florida storms began with Charley....
cycloneye wrote:Does anyone has the data about when El Nino was declared in 2004? I ask because there has been much talk about 2004 being an analog year for 2009.