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Stormchaserchuck1

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  1. Long range 18z GEFS @384 hr has us as one of the coldest spots in the N. Hemisphere, matching historical ENSO analogs
  2. With inflation, I've figured out the following regarding Energy trading and the coming Winter: Natural Gas price >$5.00, more likely -NAO Winter Natural Gas price <$5.00, more likely +NAO Winter Natural Gas price >$10.00, very high likelihood of -NAO Winter Natural Gas price <$2.50, very high likelihood of +NAO Winter Natural Gas is currently trading at $3.13. December '26 contract, $4.01. March '27 contract, $3.21. Top 10 Most positive Natural Gas Winters since 1996, relative to inflation trend: ^ Average price per Winter of those years: ~$6.00 Top 12 Most negative Natural Gas Winters since 1996, relative to inflation trend: ^ Average price per Winter of those years: ~$2.60 In January 2026, the price of NG jumped from $3.12 to $7.40 as a really cold pattern set in. This was forecasted ahead of time by the CPC with no market reaction until it was days to weeks away. This cold period was associated with the 4th longest on record (since the early 1900s) that Baltimore had more than 4" of snow on the ground. The price then collapsed back to $3.40 in early February, and $2.80 by late February, and then March 2026 ended up being the warmest month relative to average on record for the CONUS, all time. There is a little lead in the NG price, but also sometimes weather patterns are a surprise.
  3. For the last 27 years, Hadley Cell has responded more to relative ENSO index. RONI was about -0.2c vs ONI during this time (I know you say it's more like the last 10 years - RONI was -0.3/4 during that time).
  4. The subsurface has stopped warming. It ebbs and flows though with Kelvin/Rossby waves. Here is what 1997 did: 2015 2023
  5. Above average temps https://charts.ecmwf.int/products/extended-anomaly-2t?base_time=202511070000&projection=opencharts_north_america&valid_time=202511170000
  6. Good question. I was going to ask if anyone wants to discuss the snap-back tendency that the historical Strong Nino analog has given us, but I think a lot of attention is on this event because it may end up extreme. I think the Nina snap-back won't be as strong this go around, but it's early. Something to watch is if cold water starts to get going in the western and central subsurface, through the next few months and into the Fall and Winter. The big, long lasting Nina's all had major cold in the subsurface during the height of previous Strong Nino peak. Here is the historical dataset: Climate Prediction Center - Relative Oceanic Niño Index (RONI) 72-73, 82-83, 97-98, 15-16, and 23-24 are your Super Nino's. Subsurface data since 1979 can be found here: Data Display and Delivery | Global Tropical Moored Buoy Array 20c Isotherm depth is probably the easiest variable to hone in on.
  7. Lots of CPC long range forecasts for above average precip in the last month. Let's see if it happens! A lot of times they are actually too early with pattern.
  8. Pretty strong Solar Max 2-3 years ago. We are hitting this +ENSO +time wrt Solar Cycle. Based on the far extent of the aurora borealis and now how strong this El Nino is getting, it is possible that the Solar Max as reported was underestimated, or the Earths magnetic field is weaker (just an unsubstantiated theory).
  9. I think it's just catching up to the -ENSO state we have held since 1998. ENSO tends to balance, historically. The thing with global temperature is that it would have actually been going higher if we had an equal number of + an - ENSO events over the last 28 years!
  10. June PNA will likely finish <-1, but it doesn't have a high correlation to the Winter, surprisingly
  11. We get a little low south of the Aleutians Days 5-9. Around Day 10 a ridge is building into the Gulf of Alaska. I guess you can say that's close, but a slight difference west makes it more -PNA. I'm just really looking at the PNA, June will likely be the 5th consecutive month of -pna, and the average is no joke, it's less than -1/month 1965, 1982, and 2023 all had a 4-month streak of -PNA that were broken in June.
  12. June is typically not a big month for ENSO to effect the N. Hemisphere pattern, but we continue to see differences in the North Pacific
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