#194 Postby cycloneye » Wed Feb 11, 2026 5:29 pm
Very long post by Dr Ben Noll about the RONI measurment of ENSO and the difference with the ONI.
https://x.com/BenNollWeather/status/2021607661318369579
@BenNollWeather
There’s a new weather term in town that you'll want to get to know: Relative Niño Index!
As the world warms and sea temperatures rise, traditional monitoring methods for El Niño and La Niña are being supplemented with new techniques that are better suited to deal with that change.
The new term is the Relative Oceanic Niño Index (RONI), which compares ocean temperatures in the equatorial Pacific with the rest of the global tropics to determine how relatively warm or cool one area is compared to another. As the coverage of above-average ocean temperatures increases, it’s becoming more challenging to decipher what’s unusual and what’s not.
This new method helps forecasters better understand where tropical thunderstorms will be focused — which ultimately influence jet streams, high- and low-pressure cells and weather around the world.
NOAA recently announced a shift to this new index to monitor and forecast El Niño and La Niña: https://weather.gov/media/notification/ ... ve_ONI.pdf
Government climate agencies in Australia and New Zealand announced in 2024 and 2025 that they would be using this new index as part of their operational monitoring of El Niño and La Niña — becoming the first countries in the world to make such a change.
These shifts demonstrate that a changing global climate affects more than just air temperatures, rainfall and humidity, also leaving an imprint on the planet’s most significant drivers of climate variability — El Niño and La Niña.
Looking at February's forecast of the relative vs. traditional Niño 3.4 Index, we can see that while the traditional index switches to El Niño by May, the relative index lags behind.
This is because the global tropics are anomalously warm and are predicted to become even warmer — which mutes the El Niño signal in a relative sense.
I'll be referencing both the traditional and relative indices to help with forecasting, but ultimately the new relative indices should be better at detecting the onset and significance of impacts from El Niño and La Niña.
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