The WUWT ENSO meter – at zero, or neutral at the moment:
Guest post by Bob Tisdale
NOAA issued an El Niño watch yesterday morning. The watch seems a bit premature. A “watch” in NOAA parlance means “conditions are favorable,” but the synopsis of the NOAA report reads:
There is a 50% chance that El Niño conditions will develop during the second half of 2012.
A 50% chance also means that El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO)-neutral conditions (not an El Niño and not a La Niña) are just as likely. Seems to me, an El Niño watch would have been more appropriate when the odds are weighted a little more toward El Niño. That may happen next month…and it may not.
Within hours of NOAA issuing the watch, Joe Romm of Climate Progress published the blog post NOAA Says ’50% Chance’ El Niño Will Develop In Second Half Of 2012, Which NASA Says Would Lead To ‘Rapid Warming’. The majority of Romm’s post is a parroting of the contents of the January 12, 2012 GISS webpage Global Temperature in 2011, Trends, and Prospects.
Let’s look at the source of the “rapid warming” in Joe Romm’s title.
Joe writes:
NASA explains that the apparent recent slowdown in global surface temperature rise is likely to prove “illusory”:
And he quotes from GISS (his boldface):
The cool La Niña phase of the cyclically variable Southern Oscillation of tropical temperatures has been dominant in the past three years, and the deepest solar minimum in the period of satellite data occurred over the past half dozen years. We conclude that the slowdown of warming is likely to prove illusory, with more rapid warming appearing over the next few years.
The paragraph of the GISS document that Joe Romm quoted in part from was the summary of the 2011 GISS report. It reads in full:
2011 was only the ninth warmest year in the GISS analysis of global temperature change, yet nine of the ten warmest years in the instrumental record (since 1880) have occurred in the 21st century. The past year has been cooled by a moderately strong La Niña. The 5-year (60-month) running mean global temperature hints at a slowdown in the global warming rate during the past few years. However, the cool La Niña phase of the cyclically variable Southern Oscillation of tropical temperatures has been dominant in the past three years, and the deepest solar minimum in the period of satellite data occurred over the past half dozen years. We conclude that the slowdown of warming is likely to prove illusory, with more rapid warming appearing over the next few years.
It appears Romm forgot to include an ellipse and a bracket on his upper-case “T” at the beginning of his quote to indicate he was not presenting that sentence in full. The complete sentence starts with the word “However”, which might lead readers to investigate what was written before it. The sentence that comes immediately before the Romm quote reads:
The 5-year (60-month) running mean global temperature hints at a slowdown in the global warming rate during the past few years.
A 5-year running mean of GISS Land-Ocean Temperature Index (LOTI) data does more than hint at a slowdown global in the global warming rate, it shows it quite well. Refer to the GISS Figure 3. The 5-year average (centered on the 3rdyear) in 2009 is the same as it was in 2003 (0.53 deg C). Not too surprisingly, Joe Romm chose to exclude any reference to that in his quote. What did surprise me was the sentence that Romm did include (my boldface):
However, the cool La Niña phase of the cyclically variable Southern Oscillation of tropical temperatures has been dominant in the past three years, and the deepest solar minimum in the period of satellite data occurred over the past half dozen years.
GISS has stated that global surface temperatures have flattened, in part, because La Niña conditions dominated the last three years. Based on GISS Land-Ocean Temperature data, the 2009-2011 average NINO3.4 sea surface temperature anomalies (the ENSO index referred to by GISS in their report) was -0.19 deg C, and that confirms that La Niña has dominated the past 3 years. But the GISS statement also implies the opposite occurs when El Niño events dominate ENSO.
It just so happens, I’ve been illustrating that fact for the past year and a half. It began with my post Multidecadal Changes In Sea Surface Temperature. The alternate title reads Do Multidecadal Changes In The Strength And Frequency Of El Niño and La Niña Events Cause Global Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies To Rise And Fall Over Multidecadal Periods? The WattsUpWithThat cross post is here.
I also discuss this in the Introduction of my upcoming ebook The Ignored Driver of Global Climate: El Niño-Southern Oscillation.
During a multidecadal period when El Niño events dominate (a period when El Niño events are stronger, when they occur more often and when they last longer than La Niña events), more heat than normal is released from the tropical Pacific and more warm water than normal is transported by ocean currents toward the poles—with that warm water releasing heat to the atmosphere along the way. As a result, global sea surface and land surface temperatures warm during multidecadal periods when El Niño events dominate. Similarly, global temperatures cool during multidecadal periods when La Niña events are stronger, last longer and occur more often than El Niño events.
I discussed it in much more detail in my book If the IPCC was Selling Manmade Global Warming as a Product, Would the FTC Stop their deceptive Ads? And since I haven’t reached that far in the draft of The Ignored Driver of Global Climate: El Niño-Southern Oscillation, I’ll have to quote from my existing book:
There are multidecadal periods, however, during the 20th Century when El Niño events are stronger and more frequent than La Niña events. We can illustrate this using the average NINO3.4 sea surface temperature anomalies for given periods. For our example, we’ll use the early and late 20th Century warming periods, and the mid-century “flat temperature” period. We’ll extend the late warming period to 2010 to bring it more up to date. And we’ll compare annual NINO3.4 data to GISS Global Land-Ocean Temperature Index (LOTI) data. See Figure 6-50. The period-average NINO3.4 sea surface temperature anomalies during the early and late warming periods are quite similar. On the other hand, the period average NINO3.4 sea surface temperature anomalies during the mid-20th Century flat temperature period are slightly negative.
Figure 6-50
In Figure 6-51, the temperature scale of the graph has been reduced so that it better shows the global surface temperature and the period-average NINO3.4 sea surface temperatures.
For the early warming period of 1917 to 1944, the average NINO3.4 sea surface temperature anomalies are about +0.175 deg C, and during the late warming period of 1977 to 2010, they’re approximately +0.188 deg C. The fact that the average NINO3.4 sea surface temperature anomalies are greater than zero indicates that the frequency and magnitude of El Niño events are greater than La Niña events. That would also indicate, during those periods:
1. more warm water is released from the Pacific Warm Pool than “normal”,
2. the tropical Pacific is releasing more heat than normal into the atmosphere,
3. teleconnections are causing surface temperatures outside of the tropical Pacific to warm more than normal, and
4. more warm water than normal is being redistributed toward the poles.
Figure 6-51
Suppose instead of the large periodic events, there were long-term low-temperature El Niño events taking place during those two periods; that is, one long El Niño during each warming period; we would expect surface temperatures to rise. And that is, in effect, what happened.
The reverse should happen during multidecadal periods when NINO3.4 surface temperatures are below normal. The average NINO3.4 sea surface temperature anomalies for the period of 1944 to 1976 is -0.05 deg C. La Niña events obviously dominated the mid-20th Century “flat temperature” period. And since La Niña events dominated:
1. less warm water is released from the Pacific Warm Pool than “normal”,
2. the tropical Pacific is releasing less heat than normal into the atmosphere,
3. teleconnections are causing surface temperatures outside of the tropical Pacific to warm less than normal, and
4. less warm water than normal is being redistributed toward the poles.
So we would expect Global land plus sea surface temperatures to decline during that period. And using GISS Land-Ocean Temperature Index data, that’s exactly what happened during that period. Refer to Figure 6-52.
Figure 6-52
Joe Romm closed his post yesterday with:
Stay tuned. The heat is on.
Apparently, Joe hasn’t realized the heat’s been on since 1976 when El Niño events started to dominate ENSO.
Maybe, just maybe, we’ve recently entered into a new epoch when the frequency, magnitude and duration of La Niña events exceed those of El Niño. In other words, has El Niño turned over control of ENSO to his little sister La Niña? Only time will tell.
INTERESTED IN LEARNING MORE ABOUT THE EL NIÑO-SOUTHERN OSCILLATION AND DON’T WANT TO WAIT FOR MY NEW BOOK?
I hope to have my new ebook competed by the end of July. If that’s not soon enough for you and you’d like an idea of what’s discussed in parts of my upcoming book see If the IPCC was Selling Manmade Global Warming as a Product, Would the FTC Stop their deceptive Ads?
Section 6, or about 25% of the book, is about the processes that are part of El Niño and La Niña events. Many of the discussions are rewordings (expansions and simplifications) of my posts here at Climate Observations, so you could save a few bucks and rummage through dozens of posts. But the book provides a single resource and reference for you and includes a very basic, well-illustrated introduction to El Niño, La Niña, and ENSO-neutral conditions written in simple terms. Included in that section are discussions of how La Niña events are not the opposite of El Niño events and how and why certain parts of the global oceans warm in response to certain El Niño AND to the La Niña events that follow them. The El Niño-Southern Oscillation is a marvelous process Mother Nature has devised to enhance or slow the distribution of heat from the tropics to the poles. It is process that naturally varies in intensity, and due to those variations, it is capable of warming or cooling global temperatures over multiyear and multidecadal periods. The individual chapter titles of Section 6 will give you an idea of the topics discussed. See pages 9 and 10 of the introduction, table of contents, and closing of my book in pdf form here.
![elninometer-current[1]](http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/elninometer-current1.gif)



J. Philip Peterson says:
June 8, 2012 at 12:54 pm
El Nino vs La Nina. Sorry, every time I look at one of these I have to look it up as to which is Pacific Ocean warming and Pacific ocean cooling. To me it means ‘the boy’ and ‘the girl’ – I live in the Baja. I guess the boy is hot and the girl is cold, I think the opposite would be appropriate.
Philip, just in case you really don’t know the origins of La niña and el niño. The original name was el niño because it was a warm current which passed up the west coast of Sth America and arrived as christmas approached. It had the effect of killing the anchovy fishing season so was the only one of the 2 el/la that mattered. La Niña was considered normal because the fishing was good. Lots of food from the sth.
Now watch ol’ Big Daddy Don Garlits here. As soon as that tree goes green we’re going to have rapid acceleration, up to 40m/s²! If that were to continue for 1000 years, he’d be going over 1.2 billion kilometers per second! That’s more than 4000 times the speed of light!
The weather you are experiencing is illusionary the weather being predicted is real
Philip Bradley says:
June 8, 2012 at 1:24 pm
I think there are issues with both GISS and HADCRUT land/ocean datasets,…
_________________________
Yes there are issues, they are ADJUSTED data sets.
http://notrickszone.com/2012/03/01/data-tamperin-giss-caught-red-handed-manipulaing-data-to-produce-arctic-climate-history-revision/
http://judithcurry.com/2012/03/15/on-the-adjustments-to-the-hadsst3-data-set-2/
http://diggingintheclay.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/canadadt.png
This study is of interest: Study finds stream temperatures don’t parallel warming climate trend OOPS looks like they missed a data set.
Three Graphs illustration of adjustments: http://jonova.s3.amazonaws.com/graphs/giss/hansen-giss-1940-1980.gif
Graph of difference between raw and adjusted data: http://cdiac.ornl.gov/epubs/ndp/ushcn/ts.ushcn_anom25_diffs_urb-raw_pg.gif
Umm, about that ENSO meter. I get the data for that from http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/indices/wksst.for and for about the third time over the last year their (automatic, I assume) updater stopped updating. It starts up again after I notify them of the problem. After the last time, I found and considered shifting to one from Australia, I think I will this time. The data isn’t an exact match, but each is a weekly average and should be fine for our interests.
At the moment I’m fighting with my wife’s MacBook that connect to but can’t print on our printers and converting routers because my venerable Linksys router’s radio transmitter fried when Apple support asked me to cycle power on it. Sigh.
I’ll get to it ASAP.
Excellent post, Mr. Tisdale. You explain it in a way that even a technological dunce like me can understand. You’re musings on whether ENSO may experience a reversal, with La Nina becoming the dominant one, are very thought-provoking.
Joe Romm must have a sore cheek by now from the continued slap-downs you seem to be giving him.
I thought it was all about CO2 – what with the Hispanic hat dances now controlling the Climate?
GRANT SCIENCE IS BAD SCIENCE for it is like Government employee UNIONS – pay for services and votes. Same old Same old QUID PRO QUO – One government feeds the other our hard earned money – all agencies or Universities = all 100% government eating the tax payers food.
A wise and frugal Government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, which shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned. This is the sum of good government, and this is necessary to close the circlue of our felicities.
Thomas Jefferson
What? Hansen hasn’t predicted a “super” El Nino yet? The guy must be asleep at the switch.
I always appreciate Bob’s observations, which are far more meticulous than I could ever manage. But I’ll add a few of my own, as a way of warning poor Romm, who’s sensationalism tends to make any observation at all next to impossible.
First, there tends to be a “lag” before La Ninas and El Ninos show their effect. Due to this “lag,” we may be seeing a few more effects of the past La Nina before we see the El Nino effects kick in.
Second, in the Northeast of the USA, the “cool” La Nina can give us some of our kindest winters, While the “warm” El Nino freezes our socks off. Timing is everything, (and a very strong El Nino over-powers this action-and-reaction,) however if you look at the history of La Ninas and El Ninos at:
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ensostuff/ensoyears.shtml
and study the years 1975, 1976 and 1977 you can see a situation much like our current situation. A La Nina in the spring of 1976 gave way to a weak El Nino by the fall. The winter of 1975-1976 was mild, where I lived in Maine, but the winter of 1976-1977 froze the harbors right down to Virginia.
It will not matter if “World Temperatures” rise 0.4 degrees. If the northeast USA is shuddering (like Europe did last winter,) and heating bills are through the roof, Romm had best bite his tongue.
I sincerely hope Romm is correct. After the dismal winter we just endured here in the North of England, and the total lack of a Spring (even our resident Herring Gulls took notice – they only began mating in the last month or so) I was really looking forward to a decent Summer. We had roughly 10 days of hot sunshine on the cusp of May/June but since then it’s been nothing but clouds and rain, and the Met Office forecast for the rest of June is more of the same.
In the late 1990s I was a true believer: I believed the hype that we were all going to fry due to Global Warming. Now I wish for the weather to be like it was back then.
I turned the heat on in my house today. The NW area has had many broken recoreds lately, some going back to the late 1800’s. We had snow at pass levels this morning. Do these recent records mean we are cooling? No. But the fact that we have had several cold springs do. Yes we may have an El Nino in the near future. Cool decades are not devoid of El Nino’s. But based on the spin above, the next El Nino will bring out the warmers along with their prognostications of impending doom. They can be ignored. Or better yet, voted out of office.
Nice post as usual, Bob. These are interesting times. I’m not sure what all the hub-bub is about. You’re data analysis has pointed to an El Nino for months. I for one would be shocked, otherwise.
I still can’t believe the precision quoted in the temperature records. I used to know the record takers for many local government authorities in Queensland during the 80’s and 90’s.
If you could accurately report to the nearest degree you were doing well – where do they get 3 decimal places ??? You need 3 to report 2.
Haven’t had time to read previous comments yet, but let me see.
Per NASA: “There is a 50% chance that El Niño conditions will develop during the second half of 2012.” Think about that statement for just a moment. I will flip a coin and my odds of being correct are about the same 50% of being correct. Does someone get paid by the published word? If not, stop looking like an idiot.
Well, we really won’t know what’s happening until Tamino steps in to tell us exactly where your calculations are wrong. /sarc
Of course, you’ll have to brave the elements over there. We know he won’t come here to face you. They only post where THEY control the moderation.
I just found this applicable from multiple angles. Happy weekend! 🙂
Interesting how people get so heated over a truly bad forecast. Let’s face it, a “50 percent probability” is no better than a flip of a coin: El Nino will or won’t occur with equal odds. And Joe Romm “issues a rapid alert” for 2013 based on this?
This is a great example of faith-based rather than science-based climate prediction.
he’s clueless Global temps will fall to below last winters UAH levels later this year before any rebound, And that rebound wont reach the levels of 2010 Jamstec is all over this already! Any warming will be the usual response upward after the colder we have seen the past 3 years since the PDO flip as you can see here in the global temp plot the past 3 years by that notorious right wing think tank… NCEP ( sarcasm)
http://policlimate.com/climate/cfsr_t2m_2011.png
Of course Romm and his ilk refuse to acknowledge the factual data that also includes before this started, the leveling of temps for 15 years previous.
Classing Dunning Krueger effect case.. confidence from ignorance which explains how one can say what he says.. he either doesnt look at the data, or simply denies it
http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/evolved-primate/201006/when-ignorance-begets-confidence-the-classic-dunning-kruger-effect
Oh and by the way, once again he unwittingly admits the oceans are in control, not co2 by claiming the nino will lead to warming. These guys dont even realize they undercut their own co2 god by salivating over the nino. stupid is as stupid does
Joseph Bastardi says:
June 8, 2012 at 9:13 pm
Oh and by the way, once again he unwittingly admits the oceans are in control, not co2 by claiming the nino will lead to warming. These guys dont even realize they undercut their own co2 god by salivating over the nino. stupid is as stupid does
================================================
All this reminds me of the movie “Twister”. Sure, it was Hollywood but we had a group of smart people operating on a shoestring trying to gather data so they could, hopefully, give people more advanced warning of a tornado. Simple, honest, worthwhile goal to help people.
There are lots of smart people with lots of money behind them out to help “The Team” instead of the people. What a waste.
Baghdad Romm
We won’t know what will happen with the Nino 3.4 index until about 3-4 weeks after the Summer Solstice (about the 2nd week of July).
My guess, which is no better than anyone elses, is for a very mild La Nina until very early next year.
Joe D’Aleo pointed out elsewhere that the AMO was cold, back when the La Nina became El Nino and the mild winter of 1975-76 was followed by the bitter cold winter of 1976-77 (in the northeast USA.) Now the AMO is still warm.
Hopefully this warm AMO will lessen the chance next winter will be bitterly cold, here in New Hampshire. However I’m going cut extra firewood all the same.
The El Nino forecast is really based on the equatorial upper ocean temperature anomaly which has risen to about +0.5C. At the equator, the 150 metre deep ocean tends to circulate from West to East and in the Pacific, it is forced to the surface at the Galapagos Islands which can then become an El Nino or a La Nina. Its above normal now so should point to an El Nino.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ocean/anim/wkxzteq_anm.gif
This is the measure over the past year.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ocean/weeklyenso/heat-last-year.gif
This measure tends to lead the Nino 3.4 Index by about 1 to 2 months, so in the next month, Nino 3.4 should rise to about +0.5C. [It was +0.289C last week].
http://img521.imageshack.us/img521/6930/ensoepuothamay12.png
But while the equator is warm in the Pacific’s depths, there is still a lot of cool water at 5S-20S and 5N-20N that is left over from the last few La Ninas and this will tend to moderate any rise in SSTs at the equator from equatorial upper 300 metre ocean temperatures.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/GODAS/pent_gif/xy/movie.h300.gif
And the Pacific Trade Winds are not providing any acceleration toward El Nino right now. They are a little higher than average right now while they need to slow down considerably and even blow backwards to produce a large El Nino.
http://img571.imageshack.us/img571/3752/ensovstradewindsmay12.png
While the Trades are above average, the actual surface currents in the equatorial Pacific are much slower than normal and are moving backwards across most the equatorial Pacific.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/GODAS/mnth_gif/xy/mnth.anom.xy.u15m.2012.05.gif
Water Vapour versus the ENSO since 1948. Pretty average last month. The importance of this correlation is vastly under-estimated in the global warming debate.
http://img805.imageshack.us/img805/2881/ensotcwv48may12.png
I’m predicting a minor El Nino of around +1.0C by December.
Richard M says:
June 8, 2012 at 1:09 pm
<iI’ve been watching the little video of the Pacific temperatures on the ENSO page and it looked like an El Niño was building until recently. Now, it looks like cooler waters are moving in. If this continues I think we may be in for another La Niña.
I’ve been watching the same video, there is indeed a suggestion of a small increase in Peruvian coast upwelling. Does this go beyond normal seasonal currents and represent actual upwelling? It looked similar in 2011 and then it did lead to a La Nina equatorial cool tongue. Time will tell which way it will go this time – I would bet on La nina again.
Richard M says:
June 8, 2012 at 1:09 pm
I’ve been watching the little video of the Pacific temperatures on the ENSO page and it looked like an El Niño was building until recently. Now, it looks like cooler waters are moving in. If this continues I think we may be in for another La Niña.
I’ve been watching the same video, there is indeed a suggestion of a small increase in Peruvian coast upwelling. Does this go beyond normal seasonal currents and represent actual upwelling? It looked similar in 2011 and then it did lead to a La Nina equatorial cool tongue. Time will tell which way it will go this time – I would bet on La nina again.