NOAA Updates its ENSO Alert on February 8, 2024 – The El Nino Advisory Continues. The La Nina Watch Begins – Timing of the Transition is Uncertain

On the second Thursday of every month, NOAA (really their Climate Prediction Center CPC) issues its analysis of the status of ENSO. This includes determining the Alert System Status.  NOAA again describes their conclusion as “ENSO Alert System Status: El Nino Advisory La Nino Watch”

The timing of the transition is not very clear which will impact the reliability of the Seasonal Outlook to be issued next Thursday.

We have included an interesting animation from and a link to an ENSO Blog article by Tom Liberto

 

CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER ENSO DISCUSSION

The second paragraph is what is important:

“The most recent IRI plume indicates a transition to ENSO-neutral during spring 2024, with La Niña potentially developing during summer 2024.  Even though forecasts made through the spring season tend to be less reliable, there is a historical tendency for La Niña to follow strong El Niño events.  The forecast team is in agreement with the latest model guidance, with some uncertainty around the timing of transitions to ENSO-neutral and, following that, La Niña.  Even as the current El Niño weakens, impacts on the United States could persist through April 2024 (see CPC seasonal outlooks for probabilities of temperature and precipitation).  In summary, a transition from El Niño to ENSO-neutral is likely by April-June 2024 (79% chance), with increasing odds of La Niña developing in June-August 2024 (55% chance).”

Below is the middle paragraph from the discussion last month.

“The most recent IRI plume indicates El Niño will gradually weaken and then transition to ENSO-neutral during spring 2024 .  Some state-of the-art dynamical climate models suggest a transition to ENSO-neutral as soon as March-May 2024.  The forecast team, however, delays this timing and strongly favors a transition to ENSO-neutral in April-June 2024.  There are also increasing odds of La Niña in the seasons following a shift to ENSO-neutral.  It is typical for El Niño to peak in December/early January, but despite weakening, its impacts on the United States could last through April (see CPC seasonal outlooks for probabilities of temperature and precipitation).  In summary, El Niño is expected to continue for the next several seasons, with ENSO-neutral favored during April-June 2024 (73% chance).”

We now provide additional details.  The level of uncertainty with respect to how this El Nino will play out has increased a bit.

CPC Probability Distribution

Here are the new forecast probabilities. The probabilities are for three-month periods e.g. JFM stands for January/February/March.

Here is the current release of the probabilities:

This chart shows the forecasted progression of the evolution of ENSO from the current El Nino State to Neutral and by the summer to La Nina.  This kind of  bar chart is not very good at showing uncertainty.

Here is the forecast from last month.

The analysis this month and last month are different.  This month the probability of El Nino in MAM is much more than was expected last month.  That is important.

What Does the NOAA Proprietary ENSO Model Forecast?

This seems off. Notice the wide spread of the solutions. We will discuss that later in the article. If you want to see an updated version you can view an updated version by clicking HERE. So this is not the official CPC forecast but a secondary tool that they use.

View of other Models.

The NOAA proprietary model forecast for the timing of the decline of the NINO  3.4 Index is now much quicker than the others in this small collection of model results prepared by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. However, NOAA does not rely on that model and uses a different approach. Look at what some of the models are predicting for June. Some show us in La Nina and others still show us in El Nino.

I do not yet have the JAMSTEC forecasts.

Looking at Actual Current Conditions.

NOAA reports some derived data that describes the current situation and a forecast. But what if we want to form our own opinion? After all, meteorologists are looking at the actual current situation and making predictions.

This shows the current actual situation for the surface of oceans.   To update this graphic click HERE.

You can see the warm tongue of water extending from Ecuador and Peru. It is separating from South America and it is not colored very dark red. It has some Modoki characteristics. The cold currents moving up the western side of South America are strong this month. We are discussing ENSO tonight but you can see a lot of interesting things here. It is only a one-day snapshot so keep that in mind. There is not much warm water along any coast of the United States.

Putting the historical information in motion. Updates can be found HERE. but should not be needed.

Now we look at the below surface temperature anomalies. Mapping the details. (Cross-Section along the Equator). The data is a five-day average centered on the date shown.

Here is the new map followed by the prior two graphics. The undercutting of the warm water by the cooler water is clear but when does it reach the surface?

 

There is a lot of warm water on the surface and a declining amount of cooler water below it.  The Indo-Pacific Warm Pool is pretty much spent. El Nino’s days are numbered but the timing is not clear.

This shows the water column anomaly is now neutral i.e. the warmer water near the surface and the cooler water below cancel each other out.

Another Kelvin Wave would maintain or increase the Nino 3.4 Index at least in the short term. But what we see is just the cool upwelling of the prior Kelvin Wave.

 

Is the response of the atmosphere sufficient to sustain an El Nino?

This made me want to take a look at the SOI Index,
The recent rise in the SOI may mean the atmosphere is not fully responding to the warmer sea surface temperatures.  That is not talked about very much.  The SOI is now solidly in ENSO Neutral territory.

We are including a Tom Di Liberto Article this week.

You can read the full Tom Diliberto HERE.  But we want to call your attention to one particular Graphic:
This animation shows the undercutting of the warm water by cooler water.

 

Temperature anomalies at depth in the Pacific ocean from late 2023 to January 2024. Blue colors spread eastward at depth representing below-average temperature. Red areas representing above-average temperature remain closer to the surface across the central/eastern Pacific ocean.

Water temperatures in the top 300 meters (1,000 feet) of the tropical Pacific Ocean compared to the 1991–2020 average in December 2023–January 2024. NOAA Climate.gov animation, based on data from NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.

I hope you found this article interesting and useful.

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