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June 2018 ENSO Update: El Niรฑo Watch!

June 14, 2018

Well, well, wellโ€ฆ what have we here?

Favorable conditions for El Niรฑo to develop?

Theย June ENSO forecastย estimates a 50% chance of El Niรฑo developing during the late summer or early autumn, and an approximately 65% chance of El Niรฑo conditions in the winter, so forecasters have instituted anย El Niรฑo Watch.

Whoโ€™s on first

Before we get into the potential for El Niรฑo, letโ€™s talk about right now. We are in neutral, and forecasters expect that ENSO-neutral conditions will play on through the summer. The surface temperature of the tropical Pacific Ocean is close to the long-term average inย most areas, including the Niรฑo3.4 region (our primary monitoring region for ENSO), which was smack-dab on the average in the latestย weekly measurement.

May 2018 sea surface temperature departure from the 1981-2010 average. Graphic by climate.gov; data fromย NOAAโ€™s Environmental Visualization Lab.

Another interesting thing this map shows us is the prominent pattern of warmer-than-average surface temperatures north of the equator, and cooler-than-average waters south of the equator. This illustrates the strongly positive phase of theย Pacific Meridional Modeโ€ฆ which Iโ€™ll get to in a minute.

The atmosphere is also looking pretty ENSO-neutral. Remember, warmer-than-average waters tend to evaporate more water and warm the air above them, creating more rising motion and clouds than average. Cooler waters are the reverse, resulting in less cloud cover than average. During a La Niรฑa event such as this past winter, we expect fewer clouds over the central Pacific, and more over Indonesia, which demonstrates theย atmospheric responseย to La Niรฑaโ€™s cooler-than-average central Pacific.

Places that were more (purple) or less (orange) cloudy than the 1981-2010 average during May 2018, based on satellite observations of outgoing longwave radiation (heat). Thick clouds block heat from radiating out to space, so less radiation = more clouds, and more radiation = clearer skies. Climate.gov map from CPC data.

Some reduced cloudiness and rain remained over the central Pacific during May, but as we move intoย June, this pattern is weakening further.

Whatโ€™s on second

Computer model forecasts made in June are usually more reliable than those made earlier in the spring, thanks to the progression beyond theย spring predictability barrier. While many of these models have been hinting at warming east-central Pacific sea surface temperatures for a few months, we can trust their predictions a bit more now that weโ€™re moving past the spring barrier.

Most of theย dynamical modelsย predict sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific will be more than 0.5ยฐC warmer than the long-term average by this fallโ€”i.e., above the threshold for El Niรฑo conditions. Severalย statistical models, which make predictions by applying statistics to historical conditions, are also currently predicting sea surface temperatures in the El Niรฑo realm by late fall. These models are often more conservative than the dynamical models, and the fact that both sets are largely in agreement is lending forecasters some confidence.

Climate model forecasts for the Niรฑo3.4 Index. Dynamical model data (purple line) from theย North American Multi-Model Ensemble (NMME): darker purple envelope shows the range of 68% of all model forecasts; lighter purple shows the range of 95% of all model forecasts. Statistical model data (dashed line) fromย CPCโ€™s Consolidated SST Forecasts. NOAA Climate.gov image from CPC data.

But wait, thereโ€™s more! The temperature of the water below the surface of the equatorial Pacific has been elevated sinceย March, as aย downwelling Kelvin waveย formed and slowly moved from west to east under the surface. Recently, aย second downwelling Kelvin waveย reinforced the warmer-than-average subsurface conditions. The May 2018 subsurface heat content is about the 6thย highest since 1979.

Area-averaged upper-ocean heat content anomaly (ยฐC) in the equatorial Pacific (5ยฐN-5ยฐS, 180ยบ-100ยบW) during May. The heat content anomaly is computed as the departure from the 1981-2010 base period mean. Climate.gov figure fromย CPC data.

We care about the subsurface because it can provide a supply of warm water to the surface. Asย  a downwelling Kelvin wave moves to the eastern part of the Pacific, the warmer waters will rise to the surface. Thus, elevated subsurface temperatures areย often an early indicatorย that El Niรฑo is on the way.

The positive phase of theย Pacific Meridional Modeย (visible in the north-south warm-cool pattern from the sea surface temperature map above) can also be an early indicator that conditions are favorable for El Niรฑo to develop. This pattern can encourage the trade winds (the near-surface east-to-west winds along the equator) in the central Pacific to relax. The trade winds ordinarily serve to cool the surface and keep warmer waters โ€œpiled upโ€ in the far western Pacific. Often, relaxed trade winds lead to downwelling Kelvin waves, as the warmer western waters are allowed to slosh eastward.

Speaking of relaxing trade windsโ€ฆ as we go to press, the trade winds in theย eastern tropical Pacificย have weakened as a โ€œwesterly wind burstโ€ is taking place. (The effect of the Pacific Meridional Mode is usually farther to the west, and attributing the cause of any particular wind burst can be a difficult chicken-and-egg problem.) This westerly wind burst could work to enhance warming conditions.

A note of cautionโ€™s on third

With all that saidโ€ฆ itโ€™s early yet. The winds along the equator are difficult to predict more than a week in advance, and as much as westerly wind bursts can help El Niรฑo develop, so easterly wind bursts (when the trade winds strengthen) can discourage El Niรฑo. Forecasters feel that current conditions are favorable for El Niรฑo, so an El Niรฑo Watch has been raised. But weโ€™ll keep a weather eye on those conditions as summer progresses, and pitch it to you straight, here at the ENSO Blog.


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