seasonal outlook through september 2007 · the current storminess in the western u.s., but this...

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Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 Klaus Wolter (18apr07) University of Colorado, CIRES & NOAA-ESRL Climate Analysis Branch [email protected] http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/SWcasts/ El Niño / La Niña and the Spring Predictability BarrierRest of April & CPC forecasts for May - September 2007 Experimental forecast guidance

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Page 1: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

Seasonal Outlook through September 2007Klaus Wolter (18apr07)

University of Colorado, CIRES & NOAA-ESRL Climate Analysis Branch

[email protected]://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/SWcasts/

• El Niño / La Niña and the ‘Spring Predictability Barrier’

• Rest of April & CPC forecasts for May - September 2007

• Experimental forecast guidance

Page 2: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

Current state of ENSO (bottom) compared to last month (top): after a sharp drop in early 2007, we are now seeing a slow drift towards La Niña?!

Page 3: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

Eastern Pacific cloudiness (red ellipse) is enhanced close to Central America and reduced near Hawaii - typical for (late) El Niño stage; Western Pacific (blue ellipse) is enhanced near the Phillippines and reduced near the dateline - typical for (early) La Niña! “The dice have not been cast just yet”

Page 4: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

The European model’s March forecast (bottom) has slowed down

its transition towards La Niña compared to February (left).

However, by September, most forecast members indicate weak-to-

moderate La Niña conditions.

Page 5: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

New ENSO forecasts from 9* numerical & 7 statistical forecast models: the ‘Spring Predictability Barrier’ remains alive and well, but El Niño is out of the cards (for now)!*: Ignore the NASA forecast: poorly initialized & predicting an ocean colder than ever observed!

Page 6: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

The last month has been wet in New Mexico and parts of

eastern Colorado (reinforced in last 2 days), as well as parts of western Colorado (several ski

resorts closed with their deepest base of the winter).

While the last month continued warm west of the divide, eastern Colorado turned sharply colder in April (running colder than March in places), helping with ‘P-E’…

Page 7: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

After a mixed first half of April, what’s in store for us?The remainder of April appears to be on track for above-normal moisture in most

of Colorado, especially the north.

The color green translates into odds around 50% of getting moisture typical for the wettest third for this time of year. Even a dark brown refers to better than even odds.

4-6 days

6-10 days

8-14 days out

Page 8: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

What about May?

Based on historical analog soil moisture situations, the outlook for May is ‘grim’: warm and dry for much of the southwestern U.S., especially in Colorado. Fortunately, the skill level of this monthly forecast remains close to zero <a similar forecast for April was off as well>.

Page 9: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

CPC Spring Forecasts

According to CPC’s official forecasts from last month, April-June 2007 temperature (left) and precipitation (right) forecasts put most of Colorado under slightly increased odds for a warm and dry spring.Source (for CPC forecasts): http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/

Page 10: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

CPC Summer Forecasts

According to CPC’s official forecasts from last month, Colorado’s July-September 2007 seasonal temperature (left) and precipitation (right) is anticipated to be on the warm side (update will do the same due to trend), but left “EC” for the latter.Source (for CPC forecasts): http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/

Page 11: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

Experimental CDC “Forecast Guidance”

My most recent spring forecast (right) has sharpened the trend towards a dry season in western Colorado, juxtaposed with a wet forecast east of the divide (this forecast is based on data through March, but matches recent storm outcomes). If this forecast verifies, watch for a (resumed) early snow-melt west of the divide, and below-normal demand east of the mountains.Source: http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/SWcasts/

Page 12: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

Experimental CDC “Forecast Guidance”

Source: http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/SWcasts/

My early take on the summer monsoon is favorable for Arizona/Utah, but dry over much of New Mexico (and the northern Front Range). The former is consistent with the low snow pack over Utah in particular (which would favor an early monsoon) as well as the onset of La Niña conditions (for Arizona). The latter is consistent with above-normal soil moisture in New Mexico.

Given the poor proven skill level this far out, take this with a very large grain of salt!

Page 13: Seasonal Outlook through September 2007 · the current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the eastern plains more than thewest slope of Colorado.Drought concerns

Executive Summary (18 April 2007)Final version at: http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/people/klaus.wolter/SWcasts/

• While moderate El Niño conditions did briefly develop over the course of last winter, they never fully coupled the atmosphere to the tropical Pacific, and appear to have collapsed earlier this year. Though likely, a transition to La Niñais not guaranteed this year.

• The last month has seen a considerably more active storm track (and colderweather) than earlier in March. This has stabilized the remaining snow packafter appearing to be on track for near-record early meltout. The remainder ofApril promises more of the same, with the best moisture potential around April24th.

• My experimental forecast guidance for the spring season (April-June) hassharpened the outlook with an expected dry spring in western Coloradojuxtaposed with a better-than-average odds for a wet spring east of the divide.The early outlook into the monsoon season (July-September) is eitherundecided or dry (around here) for Colorado. If La Niña were to take hold soon,a dry and hot summer would be slightly more likely than not.

• Bottomline: ENSO-neutral conditions in the Pacific are not incompatible withthe current storminess in the western U.S., but this appears to favor the easternplains more than the west slope of Colorado. Drought concerns should focuson (south-)western Colorado where a lackluster snow pack and an expecteddry&warm spring are setting the stage for a difficult summer.