#92 Postby xtyphooncyclonex » Mon Nov 11, 2024 5:47 pm
TyphoonNara wrote:Pasmorade wrote:xtyphooncyclonex wrote:From writing off this season, I now think this season now has a realistic chance of not only surpassing 200, but having the most November ACE since 1991.
Truly odd how an ENSO-neutral season is outperforming a powerful El Nino the year prior. Only Jelawat developed in November 2023, while 2024 has four tropical systems already.
I wouldn't say it is too surprising. Unless very extreme, La Nina doesn't reduce the average number of named storms in the WPAC. In fact, there isn't a significant difference in the number of named storms between El Nino and La Nina years. It is just that in El Nino years, the location of TC genesis usually shifts to the East, allowing typically more room and longer time for storms to grow. This makes El Nino years tend to have more intense storms and higher ACE.
Fun fact, the most active season ever recorded, 1964, occurred in a cool neutral year.
The -PDO plays a factor too. From my amateur eyes, it does appear that +/-ENSO has to do with quality, +/-PDO with quantity.
Last year was very inactive in terms of storm count, but storm quality (longevity, ACE per storm) was in line with a top-tier season.
This year seemed poised to be the opposite, but we are on pace to have four consecutive typhoons. In November.
The MDR season at the tropical Pacific seemed to dead all year. But the genesis of the last few storms, beginning with Yinxing, seems unusual for an otherwise cool ENSO year.
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