NYC Climate Update: Possible 2019 El Niño – Jan 7, 2019

The latest seasonal forecast from the Climate Prediction Center suggests a 90% chance of an El Niño forming during this winter. Because El Niño (and its opposite, La Niña) occurs when there are sea surface temperature anomalies over large portions of the equatorial Pacific, it can affect sensible weather across the world. However, even if an El Niño does form, and is potentially strong, it doesn’t mean it’s the only determining factor for climate outlooks in our region.

Climate Predicition Center’s latest ENSO Outlook as of December 13, 2018. The CPC’s forecast probability that El Niño will form and persist through April 2019 exceeds 80%.

Definition: What is El Niño?

The term El Niño refers to the large-scale ocean-atmosphere climate phenomenon linked to a periodic warming in sea-surface temperatures across the central and east-central equatorial Pacific (between approximately the date line and 120oW)… [CPC] declares the onset of an El Niño episode when the 3-month average sea-surface temperature departure exceeds 0.5oC in the east-central equatorial Pacific [between 5oN-5oS and 170oW-120oW].

Climate prediction center

There are links between a pattern of weakening trade winds and the onset of El Niño, though there’s no conclusive understanding of the mechanics that lead to the formation of this effect. Either way, this post will focus more on possible effects of El Niño. The key lies in the geographic extent of El Niño, impacting much of the central and east-central Pacific. Since the oceans play a pivotal role in governing global atmospheric patterns, it’s no surprise that El Niño can have global weather impacts.

General Impacts of El Niño

El Niño global impacts from The Weather Network

As you can see, impacts from a classic El Niño bring warmer than normal weather to the northern part of the western US, and cooler and wetter conditions to the Gulf Coast/Deep South. Though not official yet, it does appear an El Niño was already in progress September-November, and possibly into December. This has already brought copious rains to the Southeastern US.

Green and blue hues indicate areas that received above normal precipitation.

One of the primary ways that El Niño affects global weather is by altering the intensity, orientation, and physical extent of the subtropical jet at the 200 mb level. Over the southeastern US, El Niño promotes a stronger subtropical jet streak – this can lead to the formation of stronger than usual storms over this portion of the country, bringing above normal precipitation patterns we see above.

CPC’s analysis of atmospheric anomalies, in this sequence of images, you can see the elongation of the subtropical jet (area of yellows, oranges, reds) flowing east from Asia. Similarly, a stronger subtropical jet streak is seen over parts of the US.

El Niño doesn’t have particularly strong impacts on our area, and this is borne out by the CPC’s seasonal 3-month outlook for this winter. It appears we may see slight chances for above normal precipitation here, but about equal chances of temperature anomalies.

Notice, however, that some of the areas forecast to experience above normal temperatures do map well with a classic El Niño’s impacts (Alaska, parts of the Pacific Northwest, extreme Northern Plains), as do parts of the southern tier (Texas, Gulf Coast).

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