hurricanetrack wrote:Nice rise in the SOI. Gained several points over last few days. No westerly winds with that scenario in place. 90 day avg statistically zero right now. Long way to go before it gets to the -7 that the BOM typically associates with El Nino state. Not saying it won't happen but for now, brakes have been applied. Anyone have 1997 SOI data for this time frame?
It was around -14 I believe for the monthly average so we won't know for 2014 until it's done.
And why does everyone keep saying there are no westerlies? Are we looking at the same data or people just assuming? There is a huge mass of westerlies around the dateline which is how 3.4 has warmed up every week for the past several weeks. And this all without the MJO which has an even bigger mass of WWB with it.
Notice the reds going on right now on either side of 180, that is westerlies.

I think we need to be realistic here, we're not going to see intense action over enso 24/7. It's a sloooow process, we're not going to get to a super Nino by May. It's a one slow step up process. I mean it took us almost 3 months just to get the warm water from one side of the ocean to the other and we're only just now seeing it's effects at the surface...it doesn't happen in weeks it takes months.