Friday, April 24, 2009

Hurricane Season Just Over a Month Away!

Hard for me to believe, but we're steamrolling toward the start of another hurricane season. June will be here before you know it, and speculation about what type of season we will see is of course in full swing. The consensus seems to be for a near to slightly above normal year in terms of the number of named storms, though expected by most to be one of the quieter seasons we have seen in recent years, which of course have tended to produce more storms, or at least have more swirls named. The two big reasons citied for this are 1) cooler water in the Atlantic, and 2) a possible shift toward an el niƱo pattern.


The cooler water in the Atlantic should not surprise anyone, as we have had two years of la nina (though it rested last summer) hammer away at it. For those not aware of this, la nina tends to, over time, spill over into the Atlantic and result in stronger trade winds which can cool the waters of the tropical Atlantic. I have posted an image below of years at this time which followed two years of la nina (using the MEI, which is always my measure of ENSO) to show the tendency toward this cooler tropical Atlantic.















Compare to actual SST anoms shown here:

http://weather.unisys.com/surface/sst_anom.html

Now, given that we do not appear to have entered the long term negative AMO state yet, and the fact that la nina is fading away (or arguably has faded away), the waters could easily recover some, so this is not the end-all factor to look at here. In fact I'd be surprised if they don't recover some in the next few months, but probably not nearly enough to compete with the warmth of the waters in many of our super-active years.

This leads us to the ENSO state. A lot of models are on board with a move toward el nino as we move through the next few months, and the SSTA link above shows some warmer waters starting to show up in the tropical Pacific already. But it isn't always the actual ENSO state that is important, but rather, which way the trend is going. For example, the shift out of a nina pattern can be led by the atmosphere itself, meaning some nino-like characteristics can be present before an actual nino is seen or declared. Thus, in some cases, a weakening nina can have similar effects as an actual nino. So, regardless of whether or not we go into an official nino by later in the hurricane season, these factors would seem to support less activity than what we have averaged this decade (even removing the massive 2005 season total). The farther we get on the nino side of the spectrum, the less activity I'd expect. I'm not sure we move far enough into a nino to get a year quite as quiet as 2006 though, as somewhere between warm-neutral and weak nino seems a better guess to me right now (MEI somewhere in the 0.2 to 0.6 range?). In addition, it is worth pointing out that all these guesses as far as number of namded storms is kinda pointless in a sense, as it only takes one big one to make the season memorable, and really, it is very tough to pinpoint where storms will go, as they depend on the pattern present at the time of formation, so no matter what, everyone needs to always stay prepared if you live near the coast. The consensus of 11-13 named storms from most outlets I have seen is pretty tough to argue with though.

What could allow for more activity? Well should the waters warm more solidly and the atmosphere jolt back toward la nina, then we could see more than the consensus calls for, so that is where to look in the next couple of months. Typically it is late spring / early summer when ENSO "decides" its course.

No comments:

Post a Comment