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2025-2026 ENSO


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Here is a snippet from my outlook, which I'm still balls deep in.

So much for the warm pool ending La Nina prematurely.

 

During the month of October, there was some speculation in certain weather circles that La Niña may meet a premature demise owed to an encroachment of the subsurface warm pool from the west.
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However, Eastern Mass Weather cited the strong Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), as well as a precedent for a the subsurface cold pool to recover after a retreat to the east during last summer as protective factors against an earlier than forecast peak.
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Comparisons were also made to the subsurface of the 2008, which had similar subsurface warmth on the western flank and still did not peal until mid winter.
 
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This has analysis has ultimately proven correct, as the subsurface warmth has reclaimed much of the western flank of region 3.4 and event some of region 4 on the heels of consistent trades bursts

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3 hours ago, GaWx said:

Eric Webb expects a rapid -IOD collapse starting soon, which models are showing the effects of as I showed on their Dec IO SST anomaly maps. He’s expecting El Niño to get started very early, which he said elsewhere could conceivably save Feb from being a mild month (we’ll see):

A more rapid shift towards El Niño is probably the one wild card we could play that would have the potential to significantly alter the outcome of the latter part of this winter/February in our favor (though even then it wouldn't be a guarantee that things would shift favorably even in that scenario).

 

Were the La Niña to collapse prematurely, that would herald the likelihood of warmth in parts of the East in both January and February. Perhaps the best proxy for rapid collapses are cases where the ENSO R3.4 anomaly was -0.50° or below during December and >-0.50° during January. There were only four cases since 1950 that met that criteria: Winters 1951-52, 1952-53, 1974-75, and 2001-02. 

I don't expect this winter to meet such criteria. If so, the coming winter would wind up quite a bit warmer than what I'm currently thinking and also what the latest ECMWF suggested.

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13 hours ago, snowman19 said:

Agreed. Unless we see a major SSWE and SPV destruction or close to it, I don’t see how we avoid a canonical La Niña mid-late January and especially February and March

I wouldn’t be surprised if we see a repeat of last Feb with storms taking more of a northern track. I am all in on a big January though. 

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15 minutes ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

I actually like February better than most of January.

I’m not nearly as negative about Feb as many here, but that surprises me. Just curious, what do you think many of us who are less optimistic about Feb are missing? Or are you just less optimistic about January?

edit: I just saw your post raising concerns about the pac jet for January. 

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2 hours ago, donsutherland1 said:

Were the La Niña to collapse prematurely, that would herald the likelihood of warmth in parts of the East in both January and February. Perhaps the best proxy for rapid collapses are cases where the ENSO R3.4 anomaly was -0.50° or below during December and >-0.50° during January. There were only four cases since 1950 that met that criteria: Winters 1951-52, 1952-53, 1974-75, and 2001-02. 

I don't expect this winter to meet such criteria. If so, the coming winter would wind up quite a bit warmer than what I'm currently thinking and also what the latest ECMWF suggested.

Thanks, Don.

Did you mean to include 1951-2 and 1952-3 or are those typos?

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4 hours ago, GaWx said:

Thanks, Don.

Did you mean to include 1951-2 and 1952-3 or are those typos?

While those weren’t La Niña winters, I expanded the very limited dataset to include all years with rapid warming of ENSO Region 3.4 from a cool December figure. The response in January and February was the same with or without those two cases.

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The recent flip to NAO- in modeling is positive for this winters snowfall in the northeast. Below is the correlation of November NAO with total winter snow for the La Ninas since 1950. During La Nina, there's a negative correlation of November NAO with total winter snow in the northeast; i.e, negative Nov NAO tends to produce more snow. Also included a plot for Philly to illustrate. 

naotable.png

 

nao.png

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9 hours ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

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Those enhanced trades in the CPAC are destructively interfering with MJO propagation, which is why it has really slowed down. While I believe it does propagate into phase 6, I have serious doubts as to what happens once it starts getting into phase 7…

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19 hours ago, 40/70 Benchmark said:

My honest opinion that he exagerates some of this stuff moving forwards, but to be fair to him, the jury is still out.

There are no exaggerations involved since its stuff that has already happened. The warmer the seasons get, the more they are falling into these repeating patterns. Both the actual patterns and the model error or bias patterns. It’s a reliable feature for better long range forecasting.

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50 minutes ago, bluewave said:

There are no exaggerations involved since its stuff that has already happened. The warmer the seasons get, the more they are falling into these repeating patterns. Both the actual patterns and the model error or bias patterns. It’s a reliable feature for better long range forecasting.

I am referring you the attribution aspect and what it means moving forward, but will leave it at that because nothing constructive will come of it.

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7 hours ago, George001 said:

I’m not nearly as negative about Feb as many here, but that surprises me. Just curious, what do you think many of us who are less optimistic about Feb are missing? Or are you just less optimistic about January?

edit: I just saw your post raising concerns about the pac jet for January. 

I think that strat may offer some assistance late season, but if it doesn't, all bets are off. I will posting early next week....a great deal of time is spent addressing many of the CC related issues that @bluewaveraises.

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