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Climate recap and outlook

Climate recap and outlook. Nate Mantua, PhD University of Washington Center for Science in the Earth System - Climate Impacts Group Vancouver, WA October 2, 2008. The CSES - Climate Impacts Group. http://cses.washington.edu/cig/.

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Climate recap and outlook

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  1. Climate recap and outlook Nate Mantua, PhD University of Washington Center for Science in the Earth System - Climate Impacts Group Vancouver, WA October 2, 2008

  2. The CSES - Climate Impacts Group http://cses.washington.edu/cig/ • Goal: help the Pacific Northwest become more resilient to climate variations and climate change • Supported by NOAA Climate Program Office as part of the Regional Integrated Science and Assessments (RISA) program

  3. Accumulated Precip for the past year Source: http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/global_monitoring/precipitation/northwest_1yrprec.shtml

  4. Accumulated Precip for the past year December 3rd storm Source: http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/global_monitoring/precipitation/northwest_1yrprec.shtml

  5. Chehalis River Flooding at Centralia, WA Seattle PI, Dec 5, 2007 Seattle Times, Dec 17, 2007

  6. Daily Temperatures -0.67ºC

  7. A big snow year for the Cascades Mark Stoelinga at his Skykomish Cabin January 31, 2008 http://www.komonews.com/news/15089626.html Elev 3500ft

  8. Summer ocean conditions upwelling downwelling

  9. Coastal Upwelling • Area below (above) black line indicates climatological upwelling (downwelling) season. • Climatologically upwelling season progresses from March to July along the west coast of North America from 36ºN to 57ºN. • Figures provided by Yan Xue, NOAA NCEP Winter downwelling was weak; upwelling was strong in April, May, and June, but weak in July-August

  10. Coastal ocean temperatures were cold from winter through July

  11. Oct 2007-June 2008 SST anomalies: La Niña and a cool phase of the PDO

  12. Land and Ocean temperature anomaly was +0.72°C (1901-2000 climatology), 8th warmest in 129 years

  13. Pacific Climate Outlook Summary from Oct 2007 • forecasts rated La Niña as most likely situation for 2007-08 • PDO: Transiting to cool phase as La Niña fades Forecast summaries European Center 2007 2008 2007 2008

  14. Typical winter climate pattern jet stream during past La Niña winters

  15. Last Year’s forecast: Wet Autumn and winter, Equal Chances on Temperature Temperature Precip OND OND DJF DJF

  16. Fall-Winter US climate of 2007-08

  17. Blame the circulation pattern • observed 500mb height anomalies from Dec 2007-June 2008 shows a persistent region of high heights in the Gulf of Alaska and low heights over south-central Canada … L H

  18. Blame the circulation pattern • At left is a “composite” for the last 8 La Niña periods … a close match to 2007-2008 pattern

  19. This year?

  20. Observed SST anomaliesSeptember 21-27, 2008

  21. La Nada • Tropical ocean temperatures have generally returned to long-term averages

  22. Equatorial subsurface ocean temperature anomaly • Colder than average waters in the east indicate a shallow thermocline, favoring additional cooling in the near term

  23. The latest ENSO forecasts See http://iri.columbia.edu/climate/ENSO European Center Forecast summary

  24. PDO forecast: drifting toward neutral territory -- index has been negative since last September From June-July-August 2008 initial conditions http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/forecast1/for1pdo.html

  25. Another factor in seasonal forecasts PNW December-January-February temperatures

  26. 30-day climate forecast: expect a cool-wet beginning to fall (from Sept 30, 2008) See http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov

  27. CPC Forecasts from Sept 18, 2008 precipitation temperature

  28. The Bottom line • expectation for ENSO-neutral conditions, combined with recent trends, favors “Equal Chances” for fall-winter precipitation and a small increase in the odds for warmer than average temperatures • ENSO neutral and La Niña years tend to favor major flood events • Additional influence from PDO might offset another factor… • Persistent warming trends See http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov

  29. Sept 30 estimated soil moisture percentiles • Courtesy of Andy Wood, University of Washington, data and images are available at http://www.hydro.washington.edu/forecast/monitor

  30. Daily Temperatures -0.67ºC +0.03ºC -0.64ºC

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