Official NOAA January La Nina Update: Summiting The Peak

Guest Author | | Post Tag for WeatherWeather
La Nina Patter. Image: NOAA

NOAA:ย January 2018 La Niรฑa Update

By:ย Tom Di Liberto

Now that we are smack dab in the middle of winter in the Northern Hemisphere, the time of year when ENSO tends to have its more reliable impacts in the United States, itโ€™s go-time for paying attention to whatโ€™s going on in the Pacific. And the latest CPC/IRI ENSO forecast saysโ€ฆ[drum roll please]โ€ฆLa Niรฑa is here to stay for this winter with a 85-95% probability before transitioning to ENSO-Neutral conditions during the spring.

Sidenote: Also, who is this person writing this post who is definitely not Emily? Iโ€™m Tom and Iโ€™m filling in for Emily this month (see footnote for Emilyโ€™s whereabouts). And just like a normal substitute teacher, donโ€™t be surprised if I end this article early and just make you watch a video. So buckle up!

December 2017 sea surface temperature departure from the 1981-2010 average. Image: NOAA

Settle down class, time to go over whatโ€™s going on in the Pacific

We are certainly in the midst of a La Niรฑa event as sea surface temperatures across the central/equatorial Pacific continue to remain colder than average. In fact, in December the SSTs in the Niรฑo3.4 regionโ€”the box in the Pacific Ocean where we look for La Niรฑa or El Niรฑo conditionsโ€”were ย around 1ยฐC cooler than average for the second consecutive month. Three-month average anomalies of 1ยฐC mark the cutoff between weak and moderate ENSO events, putting this La Niรฑa on the cusp of a moderate event, should the anomalies last one more month.

Of course, we canโ€™t forget that La Niรฑa is a coupled ocean-atmospheric system. So what is the atmosphere doing?

For the month of December, the thunderstorm activity across the equatorial Pacific looked pretty La Niรฑa-like with reduced precipitation near the date-line and farther east while enhanced precipitation fell across the broader Maritime continent in the western Pacific Ocean.ย  Backing this up, the Equatorial Southern Oscillation Index, which monitors areas closely related to ENSO along the equator, measured 0.9 for December. Positive values reflect lower than average pressure in the western Pacific and higher than average pressure in the central/eastern Pacific Ocean (2).

Departure from average of the surface and subsurface tropical Pacific sea temperature averaged over 5-day periods centered on January 3, 2018. The vertical axis is depth below the surface (meters) and the horizontal axis is longitude, from the western to eastern tropical Pacific. This cross-section is right along the equator. Image: NOAA

If there is one thing to pay attention to moving forward, though, itโ€™s the eastward movement along the equator of warmer than average water at depth in the ocean. This could eventually undercut the ongoing La Niรฑa in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean and help to bring an end to the event.

Pop quiz on last monthโ€™s post: what do we mean by “double-dip”ย La Niรฑa?

As Emily noted last month, this yearโ€™s La Niรฑa followed closely behind the previous La Niรฑa, which weakly petered out by Winter 2017.ย  This is called a double-dip La Niรฑa and can be seen clearly in the Hovmรถller image above of the heat content in the equatorial Pacific. The 2016-2018 double dippingโ€”here itโ€™s not a party foulโ€”is represented by the two areas of colder than average ocean heat content that sandwich a brief period of warmer than average conditions.

Heat content in the upper few hundred meters of the tropical Pacific near theย equator (5ยฐN-5ยฐS) fromย January 28, 2016 (top of image) through January 3, 2018 (bottom of image) compared to the 1981-2010 average. The western Pacific is on the left; the eastern Pacific is on the right. Each row of the image shows aย 5-day average. Scan the image from top to bottom, and you can see the “double dip” La Niรฑaย (two areas of colder than average temperatures)ย in the central-eastern Pacific. Image: NOAA

However, itโ€™s that brief period of warming that makes this double dip so unique. There have been 7 double-dip La Niรฑaโ€™s on record back to 1950 but none that warmed that much in between.ย  Does this have some over-arching meaning? Not necessarily. But it does reflect an important point about our knowledge of ENSO.

December-February temperatures compared to the 1981-2010 average during each La Niรฑa winter since records began in 1950. Gray lines under the maps indicate event strength: strong (dark gray), moderate (medium gray), and weak (light gray). Image: NOAA

While we constantly harp on the idea that no two La Niรฑas or El Niรฑos are alike, itโ€™s important to also remember that we simply do not have a ton of events to look back on. After all, whoโ€™s to say that the evolution of this double-dip La Niรฑa is so rare when weโ€™ve only documented 7 cases?

And this is also true for those images of what a La Niรฑa winter might bring to the United States. As shown in previous articles, there is considerable variability when it comes to the temperature and precipitation patterns during a La Niรฑa winter. The figure we often look at is an average of all of those events, but we donโ€™t know whether the number of events we have in our historical record fully encapsulates the possibilities. This is yet another reason why we issue our outlooks in terms of probabilities.

Climate model forecasts for the Niรฑo3.4 Index, from the 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. Image: NOAA

Your homework: whatโ€™s going to happen to La Niรฑa this year

But enough looking back. Letโ€™s look forward. Dynamical models are confident that La Niรฑa will continue during the Northern Hemisphere winter. Although, it does appear to have peaked in strength as expected because ENSO events typically peak during the winter. As we move into the spring, there is considerable uncertainty as to the direction of ENSO. And by the summer, the model forecasts show quite a range of potential outcomes with some models forecasting an El Niรฑo, some predicting Neutral, while others expect La Niรฑa. This sort of uncertainty is not uncommon the farther we look into the future. Hopefully, as we approach spring and summer, this uncertainty will decrease.ย  And I promise, you can follow along with us in the ENSO blog.


Related Articles

Got an opinion? Let us know...