hurricanetrack wrote:I think it is interesting to see two things here:
1. a cold pool has developed in the west Pac instead of more warm anomalies.
2. Fairly nice cold pool holding strong on eastern side of Pacific, right off of South America.
Seems to fit nicely with idea of weak El Nino conditions by the fall - probably centered in C Pacific. Does not seem to be any solid evidence of this so-called "Super El Nino".
The only problem with that is these are near surface anomalies, there is no cold water source. Certainly not from the PDO. Not very deep water at all. To last and be sustained (cold or warm) you must have depth to it otherwise normal thunderstorms and/or winds can easy flip.

This was 2 months ago before any warmth was seen and you had cold pools with depth support. It's gone.

Buoys shows it very well. There is very little in the way of cool anomalies, it is being pushed. 1-2C+ is popping up in the WPAC (you can see it on the animation posted by cycloneye as well).