ENSO Updates (2007 thru 2023)

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Re: ENSO Updates

#921 Postby cycloneye » Fri Jul 17, 2009 6:28 am

IRI July ENSO Forecast

This is a private form that does ENSO forecasts.They do always a comprehesive analysis of all the factors that ENSO has.

Image

Technical ENSO Update
16 July 2009

> Current conditions
> Expected conditions

Current Conditions
As of mid-July 2009, SSTs are above-average across much of the equatorial Pacific, indicative of weak El Niño conditions. Between mid-June and mid-July, SSTs in the east-central tropical Pacific have warmed from borderline El Niño conditions well into the weak El Niño category. Although slightly above-average SSTs and convection related to the weak La Niña earlier this year have been slow to decay in the western tropical Pacific, spells of westerly wind anomaly have been observed in this same region, initially in mid-June and for a second time currently. The equatorial Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) has remained slightly positive, but the traditional SOI became negative during late May and early June, but to return to positive territory recently. More importantly, equatorial heat content has been at above-average levels over the last several months, and SSTs have become above average in the eastern and east-central tropical Pacific. Although the zonal gradient in Pacific SST has not reached levels sufficient to induce zonal wind and convection anomalies indicative of full fledged El Nino, positive convection anomalies have emerged in the vicinity of the dateline since early July, while such anomalies observed in recent months in Indonesia and the western Pacific have been decreasing. The deepened thermocline in the eastern part of the basin, and associated positive subsurface sea temperature anomalies, are expected to continue fueling increases in SST in the eastern Pacific, or at the very least to ensure maintenance of the current positive SST anomalies. While this heat content anomaly is not particularly strong in magnitude, it is zonally widespread and vertically extensive to 100-150 meters depth from 150W longitude to well west of the dateline. Although heat content anomalies exist in the western part of the basin as well, the strongest sea temperature anomalies (currently just over 3 degrees C) reside in th eastern part.

For June 2009, the SST anomaly in the NINO3.4 region was 0.62 C, sufficient to be classified as indicative of weak El Nino conditions, and for the Apr-May-Jun season they were 0.24 degrees C above average. 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 Jul-Aug-Sep and the Sep-Oct-Nov seasons are approximately (-0.50C, 0.45) and (-0.75, 0.70), 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. What is the outlook for the ENSO status going forward? Wind anomalies along the equator in the western Pacific are currently westerly, but in the central and eastern portions of the basin winds remain more random. The thermocline, constituting the main element of the tropical Pacific system imparting ENSO predictability, is somewhat deeper than average throughout the entire equatorial Pacific basin, but is deeper to the greatest extent in the central and eastern parts.

July is largely past the so-called "predictability barrier" of boreal spring, typically making ENSO predictions easier than several months ago for forecasts going through boreal spring. The emergence of weak El Nino conditions during June and July is often, but not always, followed by continued El Nino conditions of at least weak, if not greater, magnitude for the remainder of the calendar year and often into the initial months of the next calendar year. The existence of positive sea temperature anomalies below the surface in the eastern tropical Pacific is conducive to El Niño development, as the warmer than average waters at depth (reflected by a positive thermocline depth anomaly), currently strongest at longitudes of 100-130W, are poised to rise to the surface in response to the easterly low-level Trade winds. This process has been maintaining SST anomalies of 1.0 C at roughly these same longitudes along the equator over the last 5 to 7 weeks. Coupling between the warmed central and eastern Pacific and the overlying atmosphere has so far been limited, but not absent, and includes an area of enhanced convection centered near the dateline. Westerly wind anomalies have weakened slightly during the last two weeks, likely related more to intraseasonal phenomena more than to the slower processes associated with the evolving El Nino. Coupling will likely increase as SSTs in the western Pacific, still slightly above average, return toward average to the west of the region currently experiencing westerly wind anomalies. Atmospheric aspects of El Niño typically are not strongly manifest until later into the ENSO seasonal cycle (e.g. late August) except during the onset of very strong El Niños. The currently developing El Nino does not appear likely to become such a very strong event, based on the timing of its development and the current subsurface heat content.
Presently, the models indicate probabilities of about 82% for maintaining El Niño conditions, and about 17% for dissipation to ENSO-neutral conditions for the Jul-Aug-Sep season in progress. Going forward, probabilities for El Niño stay near 80% for the remaining 3-month periods in 2009, decreasing to approximately 75% by early 2010, and falling below 50% by boreal spring 2010. Probabilities for La Niña conditions are predicted to be negligible, not rising to above 10% until the middle of boreal spring 2010.


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 somewhat varied in their ENSO forecasts through the 10-month forecast period. The statistical models, which were notably reluctant to predicting El Niño as recently as mid-May, are now predicting warmer conditions with the emergence of appreciably warmer initial conditions. Many of the dynamical models have continued predicting El Niño conditions of varying intensities, a majority showing somewhat greater warmth in current forecasts than those from last month. For the current Jul-Aug-Sep season, about 80% are predicting El Niño conditions, and 20% predict ENSO-neutral conditions. This 4:1 ratio continues until early in 2010, when the odds begins to decrease. 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, 12 of 15 (80%) indicate El Niño conditions for the Nov-Dec-Jan season, and 3 of 15 (20%) predict ENSO-neutral SSTs. (Note 1). 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 85-90% for Jul-Aug-Sep and Aug-Sep-Oct, decreasing into the 75-80% range throughout the rest of 2009, and to near 50% during boreal spring 2010. 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.


The IRI's probabilistic ENSO forecast takes into account the indications of this set of models, the outcome of the standard error approach described above, and additional factors such as the very latest observations that may have developed after the initialization times of some of the models. It indicates a 82% probability for El Niño conditions in the Jul-Aug-Sep season in progress, remaining near 80% through Dec-Jan-Feb 2009/10 and decreasing rapidly after the first few months of 2010.

http://portal.iri.columbia.edu/portal/s ... 2&userID=2
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Re: ENSO Updates

#922 Postby cycloneye » Sun Jul 19, 2009 8:54 am

Since July 3rd,the 30 day SOI index has stayed positive.

2009060420090703 +.4
2009060520090704 +.4
2009060620090705 +1.2
2009060720090706 +.5
2009060820090707 +.6
2009060920090708 +.6
2009061020090709 +2.9
2009061120090710 +4.5
2009061220090711 +5.9
2009061320090712 +8.2
2009061420090713 +8.9
2009061520090714 +8.9
2009061620090715 +8.2
2009061720090716 +8.2
2009061820090717 +9.6
2009061920090718 +11
2009062020090719 +11.7


Image

http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/soi.dt3

For those who dont know what the SOI is here is an explanation.

http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/glossary/soi.shtml
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#923 Postby hurricanetrack » Sun Jul 19, 2009 10:35 am

Not typical at all of an El Nino that is going to rival any events of the recent past. The atmosphere has been behaving strangly for quite some time. Trying to make sense of it all.
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Re:

#924 Postby jinftl » Sun Jul 19, 2009 4:51 pm

Perhaps one explanation for the somewhat conflicting messages being sent through measurements looked at like sst anomaly of nino region 3.4, soi indices, etc is that at this time, what we are experiencing is a weak el nino...and as a result, the various markers looked at are all over the spectrum.

Some models seem to suggest somewhat stronger el nino conditions overall by late fall and winter, but after an initial ramp up in sst in the east pac, conditions seemed to have leveled off for now (actually, sst anomalies have cooled from +1.0C two weeks ago to +0.8C this past week in nino region 3.4...in other words, trend towards slight backing off of el nino conditions.)

The SOI is another story....it is behaving more like this is la nina period since mid-June and has been on a steady climb into positive territory. Not only will these readings have to go negative, they will have to stay negative for more than a week or two like we have seen to really indicate a typical el nino level. A 30-day or 90-day negative average reading would indicate an el nino set-up clearly being established.....the clock on that has clearly not started ticking yet.

hurricanetrack wrote:Not typical at all of an El Nino that is going to rival any events of the recent past. The atmosphere has been behaving strangly for quite some time. Trying to make sense of it all.
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI has mantained positive since July 3rd

#925 Postby Aslkahuna » Sun Jul 19, 2009 5:21 pm

One thing that niggles my mind is that NOAA has announced that El Niño is here already but in looking at the SSTA's for Niño 3.4 I find that the May anomaly is +0.27C and June +0.62C-now presuming that July comes in at +0.5C or higher, that STILL does not give us the three months running of +0.5C or higher needed to meet the definition of an ongoing El Niño.

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#926 Postby KWT » Sun Jul 19, 2009 5:27 pm

Needs 0.61C to do it, I suspect even though we are seeing some cooling its going to come in above that figure so odds are we are offically going to be in El nino, granted not by a huge amount.
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI has mantained positive since July 3rd

#927 Postby jinftl » Sun Jul 19, 2009 5:49 pm

Agree...the technical definition...to my understanding...is a 3-month average anomaly of +0.5C. We have not reached that if you take today as day 90 and go back 90 days.

Was very perplexed by that as well...but it made good headlines especially as we head into hurricane season....every news station in south florida ran the story and how it would result in a lower number of storms this season. If the intention of the (premature) announcement was to get media to report this won't be a bad hurricane season, it worked! Maybe NOAA figured the public needed some good news in this year of recession...I just hope that doesn't come back to bite anyone....how quickly folks forget 1992. I had to cringe when the tv met and newscaster were discussing el nino and the newscaster said, 'at least folks in south florida may have one less thing to worry about this year', with a goofy smile on her face.

As long as folks don't dismiss a legitimate threat bearing down on them because of this, it's all good.

Aslkahuna wrote:One thing that niggles my mind is that NOAA has announced that El Niño is here already but in looking at the SSTA's for Niño 3.4 I find that the May anomaly is +0.27C and June +0.62C-now presuming that July comes in at +0.5C or higher, that STILL does not give us the three months running of +0.5C or higher needed to meet the definition of an ongoing El Niño.

Steve
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI has mantained positive since July 3rd

#928 Postby cycloneye » Sun Jul 19, 2009 6:15 pm

At the second post above of this page,you can see the latest data of the 30 day SOI for July 18 and it continues to rise now to +11.Click the symbol to see the graphic of the 30 day SOI in a clear way.
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI has mantained positive since July 3rd

#929 Postby jinftl » Sun Jul 19, 2009 6:29 pm

By comparison, these were the average July SOI readings during el nino years from the past:

1982: -19.3
1987: -18.6
1994: -18.0
1997: -9.5
2002: -7.6
2004: -6.9
2006: -8.9

2009 (avg thru 7/18): +4.3 (and rising)???

Data from: http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/current/soihtm1.shtml


cycloneye wrote:At the second post above of this page,you can see the latest data of the 30 day SOI for July 18 and it continues to rise now to +11.Click the symbol to see the graphic of the 30 day SOI in a clear way.
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI has mantained positive since July 3rd

#930 Postby Blown Away » Sun Jul 19, 2009 9:15 pm

Can you technically have El Nino if the SOI remains positive?
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#931 Postby Cyclenall » Mon Jul 20, 2009 3:21 am

Whatever is going on in the atmosphere, I don't like it at all. 2009 thus far personally has been one of the most boring weather years since early this decade. The last six years have been very interesting but now, it isn't :( . To make matters worse, this is the 2nd straight cool summer in a row (apparently one of the coldest July's in recorded history so far in one region) while I was hoping for a above average Spring and Summer :grr: .
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Re: ENSO Updates

#932 Postby cycloneye » Mon Jul 20, 2009 9:36 am

Climate Prediction Center 7/20/09 Update

No big changes from last mondays update in general.

Last week numbers:

Niño 4= +0.6ºC
Niño 3.4= +0.8ºC
Niño 3=+0.9ºC
Niño1+2= +0.9ºC


This week numbers:
Niño 4= +0.6ºC
Niño 3.4= +0.9ºC
Niño 3= +1.0ºC
Niño1+2= +0.8ºC


http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/a ... ts-web.pdf
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Re: ENSO Updates

#933 Postby cycloneye » Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:46 pm

At the second post above in this page,you can see the updated numbers of the 30 day SOI index and is up at +11.7.Still dancing in positive territory since July 3rd.
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI index continues to rise (Since July 3rd)

#934 Postby jinftl » Mon Jul 20, 2009 7:28 pm

Overall, the week over week change in the pacific suggests that el nino sst anomalies have held steady to...in some cases....cooled in the pacific....further indication that conditions are not completely what one would expect in a developing el nino....at least not a strong one in the short-term

Image

Image
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI has mantained positive since July 3rd

#935 Postby Blown Away » Mon Jul 20, 2009 7:59 pm

Bump! Can you technically have El Nino if the SOI remains positive?
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Re: ENSO Updates=SOI has mantained positive since July 3rd

#936 Postby jinftl » Mon Jul 20, 2009 8:32 pm

To my understanding, the technical definition of el nino is a 3-month anomaly in sst in a region of the east pac (nino region 3.4) of 0.5C or higher.

At least officially, SOI doesn't factor into the definition....although the correlation between el ninos and negative SOI is well establshed using historical data. The SOI has been consistently out of whack with what we should see in an el nino for the last month.

Blown_away wrote:Bump! Can you technically have El Nino if the SOI remains positive?
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#937 Postby Annie Oakley » Mon Jul 20, 2009 9:00 pm

Sorry to interrupt-but just wanted to say: Happy Anniversary Apollo 11! A job well done. What I see on this weather board is the same dedication to understanding the Universe. I see you all as part of making a difference for future generations. I applaud all you guys and gals who have made study of earth and it's environs and beyond a mission to better your fellow mankind. Storm2k-you and yours rock. Thank you forever..... :oops:
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Re: ENSO Updates

#938 Postby cycloneye » Wed Jul 22, 2009 5:34 am

Australians 7/22/09 Update of ENSO

Details
The central and eastern equatorial Pacific sea surface warmed through June and has remained warm through the first part of July. This warming is a continuation of a steady warming trend that has been observed since February 2009. Positive SST anomalies are now well established across most of the equatorial Pacific, with the monthly indices for June being +0.8°C, +0.7°C and +0.6°C for NINO3, NINO3.4 and NINO4 respectively.

In terms of weekly data, the most recent NINO indices are +1.1°C, +0.9°C and +0.6°C for NINO3, NINO3.4 and NINO4 respectively. Although the most recent NINO3 and NINO3.4 values are significantly warmer than their June values, over the past two weeks there has been little change in the weekly NINO index values. Consistent with the establishment of an El Niño, the 7-day SST anomaly map shows a persistence of positive anomalies of greater than +1.0°C across most of the central and eastern equatorial Pacific. Should these warm anomalies persist through the remainder of the southern winter and into spring, 2009 will be classed as an El Niño year. However, contrary to normal SST conditions during El Niño events, ocean temperatures in the western Pacific, Coral Sea and off northern Australia have been warmer than average. An animation of recent SST changes is available.

The sub-surface of the equatorial Pacific has steadily warmed since February 2009. A large volume of warmer than normal sub-surface water has been evident across most of the tropical Pacific since May. A four-month sequence of Pacific Ocean equatorial temperature anomaly is available here. The sequence shows a slight cooling of the sub-surface in the western tropical Pacific through July. A recent map for the 5 days ending 20 July shows warmer than normal sub-surface water extending across most of the equatorial Pacific, with anomalies exceeding +2.0°C over much of the eastern Pacific. When compared with two weeks ago, the sub-surface has cooled slightly, particularly in the west, however, most of the sub-surface remains significantly warmer than the long-term mean. An animation of recent sub-surface changes is available.

An archive of past SST and sub-surface temperature charts is available.

Trade Winds have been consistently weaker than average over the far west of the tropical Pacific in recent months. The Trade Winds have fluctuated over the central to eastern equatorial Pacific with Trades being generally weaker than the average in June and slightly stronger, closer to the long term mean in July. The latest weekly wind anomalies are shown in the TAO/TRITON map (small image above) for the five days ending 20 July.

The Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) is currently strongly positive with a 30 day value (30 July) of +12. The SOI is usually negative during normal El Niño development, therefore the current positive SOI trend is unusual. Ocean temperatures in the western Pacific, Coral Sea and off northern Australia have been warmer than average. The warmer waters near Darwin may have impacted on the SOI by keeping mean sea level pressure (MSLP) lower at Darwin, while recent weather patterns have kept Tahiti MSLP high. Some cooling of the warm waters off northern Australia has occurred in the past week. As the equatorial Pacific continues to warm and Trade Winds remain generally weak the SOI is expected to fall to negative values again. (SOI graph, SOI table).

Cloudiness near the date-line over the central to western Pacific is another important indicator of warm/cool ENSO conditions, as it normally increases/decreases (negative OLR/positive OLR anomalies) during these episodes. Cloudiness near the date-line has increased steadily in recent months. Consistent with a developing El Niño, cloudiness near the date-line has generally been greater than normal over the past few weeks. This is supported by satellite measurements of rainfall, which now show above average in rainfall in these areas.

All international dynamic computer models surveyed by the Bureau of Meteorology predict further warming of the Pacific Ocean SST in coming months. All models predict SST to be above El Niño thresholds throughout most of the second half of 2009. One of the surveyed models shows less vigorous warming than other models, however all models predict El Niño conditions to be established by the southern spring at the latest. As all models surveyed agree El Niño conditions will persist, and as historically the southern winter is a time of good model predictability, the probability of El Niño conditions remaining through 2009 is high. If this occurs, 2009 will be declared an El Nino year. Recent forecasts from the POAMA model, run daily at the Bureau of Meteorology, show a steady warming with El Niño conditions developing in July. Pacific conditions and model predictions will continue to be monitored closely.

http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/
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Re: ENSO Updates=Australians 7/22/09 Update

#939 Postby jinftl » Wed Jul 22, 2009 5:45 am

From the report above, a few key points reflect what memebers on the board have been noticing:

Although the most recent NINO3 and NINO3.4 values are significantly warmer than their June values, over the past two weeks there has been little change in the weekly NINO index values

...contrary to normal SST conditions during El Niño events, ocean temperatures in the western Pacific, Coral Sea and off northern Australia have been warmer than average.

The Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) is currently strongly positive with a 30 day value (30 July) of +12. The SOI is usually negative during normal El Niño development, therefore the current positive SOI trend is unusual.
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Re: ENSO Updates

#940 Postby BigA » Thu Jul 23, 2009 4:36 pm

http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/tao/

Looks like a bit of a shrinkage and movement westward of the +1.0 anomalies relative to last week. Unfortunately, I don't know how to find archived data on the site.
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