The 2014/15 El Niño – Part 7 – May 2014 Update and What Should Happen Next

This post provides an update on the progress of the evolution of the 2014/15 El Niño. Included are updates of the weekly sea surface temperature anomalies for the four most-often-used NINO regions. Also included are updates of the GODAS map-based animations of sea surface height anomalies, T300 anomalies (depth-averaged temperature anomalies to 300 meters), sea surface temperature anomalies, and the cross sections of temperature anomalies at depth along the equator. GODAS only includes the last 3 months in the animations at their website. These animations start in January 2014 for the full progress of the events.

We compared the evolution of the 2014/15 El Niño to the 1982/83 and 1997/98 El Niños in the third post in this series. The evolution of this El Niño is still being hyped by comparing it to the strong 1997/98 El Niño. See Kevin Trenberth’s YouTube video here. So I’ve updated those graphs. And since we’ve been watching the downwelling (warm) Kelvin wave as it makes its way east along the equator in the Pacific, also included in this post are evolution comparisons using warm water volume anomalies and depth-averaged temperature anomalies from the NOAA TAO project website.

Then we’ll take a look at a number of Hovmoller diagrams comparing the progress so far this year to what happened in 1997. This will serve as a background for a general discussion of what should happen next as this El Niño evolves, regardless of how strong this El Niño eventually becomes.

NINO REGION TIME-SERIES GRAPHS

Figure 1 includes the weekly sea surface temperature anomalies of the 4 most-often-used NINO regions of the equatorial Pacific. (Yes, Virginia, there are more NINO regions.) From west to east they include:

  • NINO4 (5S-5N, 160E-150W)
  • NINO3.4 (5S-5N, 170W-120W)
  • NINO3 (5S-5N, 150W-90W)
  • NINO1+2 (10S-0, 90W-80W)

While the +0.5 deg C El Niño threshold really only applies to the NINO3.4 region, I’ve highlighted +0.5 deg C in red on all four graphs. As of last week, with the exception of the NINO3.4 region, the sea surface temperature anomalies in all four NINO regions are warmer than +0.5 deg C. But the NINO3.4 region anomalies are within spitting distance of that threshold. It won’t take much to push them over.

Figure 1

Figure 1

EL NIÑO EVOLUTION COMPARISONS FOR NINO REGION SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANOMALIES

Using weekly sea surface temperature anomalies for the NINO3.4, NINO3 and NINO1+2 regions, Figure 2 updates and expands on the comparisons of the evolutions of this El Niño with the 1982/83 and 1997/98 events. As you’ll recall, the NINO3.4 and NINO1+2 comparisons were originally provided in the post 2014/15 El Niño – Part 3 – Early Evolution – Comparison with 1982/83 & 1997/98 El Niño Events. I’ve added the NINO3 region for this post. NINO3.4 and NINO3 region sea surface temperature anomalies this year are still in the ballpark of the two earlier strong El Niños. And in the NINO1+2 region, the temperature anomalies have broken away sharply from the 1982/83 El Niño evolution, but they’re still far below the values at this time for 1997/98 El Niño. We’ll have to keep an eye on the NINO1+2 data, because they’re an indicator of an East Pacific El Niño, which are stronger than Central Pacific El Niños.

Figure 2

Figure 2

ANIMATION UPDATES

In the first post in this series, we discussed a number of animations of maps and animations of equatorial cross sections available from the NOAA Global Ocean Data Assimilation System (GODAS) website. Each cell of the animation is a 5-day (pentadal) average. Those animations ran from January 3rd to March 29th. The following are updates, again starting in January 3rd. GODAS only maintains their animations for 3 months. I’ve stored the maps from the first of the year and will continue to add maps as time progresses. That way we can watch the El Niño unfold from the beginning and then try to keep track of the warm water when El Niño is over.

Animation 1 provides the sea surface height anomalies and the depth-averaged temperature anomalies for the top 300 meters (T300) side by side. With the update, we can see that the downwelling Kelvin wave has reached the coast of South America. (Thump.) Please click them to enlarge them.

Animation 1 GODAS SSH v H300 thru May 3

Animation 1

Animation 2 is a similar side-by-side comparison, but on the left are maps of sea surface temperature anomalies and on the right are the H300 maps. In less than two months, we’ve gone from La Niña conditions in the sea surface temperature anomalies of the eastern equatorial Pacific to the threshold of El Niño conditions. Considering the immensity the Pacific, that was quite a remarkable feat of nature.

Animation 2 GODAS SST v H300 thru April 28

Animation 2

And Animation 3 is an update of the cross sections of temperature anomalies at depth along the equator.

Animation 3 GODAS Equat Cross Sections thru May 3

Animation 3

EL NIÑO EVOLUTION COMPARISONS WITH TAO PROJECT SUBSURFACE DATA

The NOAA Tropical Atmosphere-Ocean (TAO) Project website includes data for two temperature-related datasets for the equatorial Pacific. See their Upper Ocean Heat Content and ENSO webpage for descriptions of the datasets. The two datasets are Warm Water Volume (above the 20 deg C isotherm) and the Depth-Averaged Temperatures for the top 300 meters (aka T300). Both are available for the:

  • Western Equatorial Pacific (5S-5N, 120E-155W)
  • Eastern Equatorial Pacific (5S-5N, 155W-80W)
  • Equatorial Pacific (5S-5N, 120E-80W)

Keep in mind that the longitudes of 120E-80W stretch 160 deg, almost halfway around the globe.

In the following three graphs, we’re comparing data for the evolution of the 2014/15 El Niño so far (through month-to-date May 2014) with the data for the evolutions of the 1982/83 and 1997/98 El Niños. The Warm Water Volume data are the top graphs and the depth-averaged temperature data are the bottom graphs. As you’ll see, the curves of two datasets are similar.

Let’s start with the Western Equatorial Pacific (5S-5N, 120E-155W), Figure 3. The warm water volume and depth-averaged temperature data show the Western Equatorial Pacific had slightly less warm water or was slightly cooler this year than during the opening months of 1997. But 2014 had more warm water or was warmer than 1982.

Figure 3

Figure 3

In the second post in this series, we showed that the ocean heat content for the entire eastern tropical Pacific (24S-24N, 180-80W), for the depths of 0-700 meters, was cooler now than it was in 1997. (See the graph here.) The warm water volume and depth-averaged temperature data shown in Figure 4 for the eastern equatorial Pacific also show lower warm water volume and lower depth-averaged temperatures in 2014 than in 1997.

Figure 4

Figure 4

As a result, across the entire equatorial Pacific, Figure 5, warm water volume is lower and depth-averaged temperatures are less in 2014 than they were in 1997. Then again, they’re higher than they were in 1982.

Figure 5

Figure 5

Keep in mind, though, that both the 1982/83 and 1997/98 events were strong El Niños.

COMPARISONS OF HOVMOLLER DIAGRAMS OF THIS YEAR (TO DATE) WITH 1997

Hovmoller diagrams are a great way to display data. If they’re new to you, there’s no reason to be intimidated by them. Let’s take a look at Figure 6. It presents the Hovmoller diagrams of thermocline depth anomalies (the depth of the isotherm at 20 deg C) with 2014 on the left and 1997 on the right. GODAS, unfortunately, furnishes the illustrations (not the data) in different dimensions for the two years. The vertical (y) axis in both is time with the Januarys for both years at the top and Decembers at the bottom. The horizontal (x) axis is longitude, so, moving from left to right, we’re going from west to east…with the Indian Ocean in the left-hand portion, the Pacific in the center and the Atlantic in the right-hand portion. We’re interested in the Pacific. The anomaly data are color-coded according to the scales below the Hovmollers.

Figure 6 GODAS Thermocline Depth Anomalies 2014 v 1997

Figure 6

Figure 6 is presenting the depth of the 20 deg C isotherm along a band from 2S to 2N. The positive anomalies, working their way eastward since the beginning of 2014, were caused by the downwelling Kelvin wave, which pushes down on the thermocline (the 20 deg C isotherm). You’ll note how the anomalies grew in strength as the Kelvin wave migrated east. That does not mean the Kelvin wave is getting stronger as moves east; that simply indicates that the thermocline is normally closer to the surface in the eastern equatorial Pacific than it is in the western portion. The 1997/98 El Niño was preceded by two downwelling Kelvin waves shown in the right-hand Hovmoller in Figure 6. The first one that began in 1996 wasn’t very strong, but the second one that began a few months later in 1997 was enough to kick start the 1997/98 El Niño.

Note how the thermocline continued to drop in the eastern equatorial Pacific as 1997 progressed. The 1997/98 El Niño was a freak. So much warm water flooded from the western tropical Pacific into the eastern portion that the normal warm water distribution along the equator reversed. That is, normally there is more warm water in the western portion than in the eastern portion of the equatorial Pacific so that the thermocline slopes upward from west to east, but at the peak of the 1997/98 El Niño, there was more warm water in the central and eastern portion than the west, with the slope of the thermocline growing downward from west to east. (See the cross section from ECMWF here.)

Figure 7 presents the 2014-to-date and 1997 Hovmollers for wind stress (not anomalies) along the equator. The simplest way to explain them is that they’re presenting the impacts of the strengths and directions of the trade winds on the surface of the equatorial oceans. In this presentation the effects of the east to west trade winds at various strengths are shown in blues, and the reversals of the trade winds into westerlies are shown in yellows, oranges and reds.

Figure 7 GODAS Zonal Wind Stress 2014 v 1997

Figure 7

The two westerly wind bursts shown in red in the western equatorial Pacific in 2014 are associated with the downwelling Kelvin wave, and the westerly bursts early in 1997 are associated with the Kelvin waves that year. Note how in 1997 as time progressed from June through November that the negative wind stresses decreased, with the neutral whites expanding eastward, and with repeated westerly wind bursts in the western equatorial Pacific. Those westerly wind bursts throughout the summer and fall of 1997 continued to help push warm water from the western equatorial Pacific into the east, strengthening the 1997/98 El Niño.

Figure 8 presents the Hovmollers of wind stress anomalies…just a different perspective. Note how there were more positive wind stress anomalies in the western equatorial Pacific in 1997 than there have been so far this year. The westerly wind bursts this year were earlier, but the westerly wind bursts in 1997 were stronger and longer.

Figure 8 GODAS Zonal Wind Stress Anomaly 2014 v 1997

Figure 8

And Figure 9 presents the Hovmollers of sea surface temperature anomalies. Unfortunately, the Hovmoller of sea surface temperature anomalies is delayed a few weeks. But as we’ve seen in the comparison graphs in Figure 2, the sea surface temperature anomalies of the NINO3.4 and NINO3 regions in 2014 are tracking with those of 1997, and that the sea surface temperature anomalies this year in the NINO1+2 region are less than they were at this time in 1997. As you’ll note in the Hovmoller for this year, it didn’t take long for the La Niña conditions in the eastern equatorial Pacific to disappear.

Figure 9 GODAS SST Anomaly 2014 v 1997

Figure 9

WHAT’S NEXT?

As you’ll recall, the surface temperatures (absolute) and the strength of the trade winds are coupled. The temperature difference between the western and eastern tropical Pacific (warmer in the west than in the east) depends on the strength of the trade winds (blowing from east to west), and the strength of the trade winds depend on the temperature difference between the western and eastern tropical Pacific. The stronger the trade winds, the greater the temperature difference, and the greater the temperature difference, the stronger the trade winds. The temperature difference and the trade winds reinforce one another with positive feedback. That positive feedback is called Bjerknes feedback.

Now, in the wake of the downwelling Kelvin wave, as the warmer-than-normal subsurface waters are upwelled to the surface, the temperature difference (absolute) between the eastern and western equatorial Pacific is decreasing. The trade winds will weaken in response, allowing more warm water from the West Pacific Warm Pool to migrate eastward, which decreases the temperature difference more, which further weakens the trade winds, etc.; that is, the positive feedback between the trade winds and the surface temperature gradient (absolute) will reinforce the decrease in the temperature difference between the western and eastern tropical Pacific by forcing more warm water from west to east. And as a result, the surface temperatures and anomalies in the eastern equatorial Pacific will rise.

That feedback will eventually kick in to allow the 2014/15 El Niño to strengthen, if it hasn’t started already. The only questions now are how strong the El Niño will become and how long El Niño conditions will last. Everything depends on the weather in the tropical Pacific, which is why no two El Niño events are the same.

EARLIER POSTS IN THIS SERIES

And for additional introductory discussions of El Niño processes see:

FURTHER READING

My ebook Who Turned on the Heat? goes into a tremendous amount of detail to explain El Niño and La Niña processes and the long-term aftereffects of strong El Niño events. Who Turned on the Heat? weighs in at a whopping 550+ pages, about 110,000+ words. It contains somewhere in the neighborhood of 380 color illustrations. In pdf form, it’s about 23MB. It includes links to more than a dozen animations, which allow the reader to view ENSO processes and the interactions between variables.

I’ve lowered the price of Who Turned on the Heat? from U.S.$8.00 to U.S.$5.00. A free preview in pdf format is here. The preview includes the Table of Contents, the Introduction, the first half of section 1 (which was provided complete in the post here), a discussion of the cover, and the Closing. Take a run through the Table of Contents. It is a very-detailed and well-illustrated book—using data from the real world, not models of a virtual world. Who Turned on the Heat? is only available in pdf format…and will only be available in that format. Click here to purchase a copy. Thanks. Book sales and tips will hopefully allow me to return to blogging full-time once again.

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James at 48
May 9, 2014 2:33 pm

My hope is modest. I hope we have at least a normal rainfall year in 2014 – 15. Anything more would be a bonus. (California perspective). Ixnay on the dust bowl!

Weather Dave
May 9, 2014 2:34 pm

Phlogiston and sloshing.
Don’t lose sight of the Equatorial Counter Current. It runs from West to East with the latitude band roughly 7N to 1S. It most certainly is moving water to the East. It fluctuates in intensity but it’s real. Yachts use it all the time to get east. The biggest influence on it is the MJO but there are many others.
And Ekman pumping or transport is important when considering ENSO. Wind flow velocity along the eastern South American Coast will cause oceanic upwelling bringing cold water to the surface. That’s why it’s important to monitor the semi-permanent Anticyclone off the coast. ENSO is incredibly complicated. There are so many factors involved and one reason why models are seldom correct.

Weather Dave
May 9, 2014 2:36 pm

correction: Western South American Coast. Sorry.

KRJ Pietersen
May 9, 2014 3:20 pm

Bob Tisdale says:
May 9, 2014 at 2:27 pm
Thank you, Bob. You are an educator.
The alarmists and warmistas will look at the step changes in global surface temperatures that you explain and ask “OK, but where is this extra heat in the Earth’s system coming from, and if it’s just a natural ongoing upward progression, why hasn’t the Earth fried already if it’s only step changes upwards? Where’s the other side of the coin that takes us down again and keeps us within acceptable limits?”
I must admit I can’t answer that question.

Farmer Gez
May 9, 2014 4:07 pm

The multi year droughts in Texas during the early 50’s keys in nicely with excellent high rainfall years in Eastern Australia. Can I expect the opposite seasonal conditions to Texas this year?

Green Sand
May 9, 2014 4:09 pm

KRJ Pietersen says:
May 9, 2014 at 3:20 pm
“OK, but where is this extra heat in the Earth’s system coming from, and if it’s just a natural ongoing upward progression, why hasn’t the Earth fried already if it’s only step changes upwards?

—————————————–
It can’t be “extra” it can only be energy we receive from our sun. How our planet chooses to distribute, dissipate, utilise or simply retain said energy is what we mere homo sapiens are striving to comprehend. At present our experience relative to the life of this planet is the same as a “one day butterfly”, we know next to nothing!
On the other hand there is another species “homo superbus” who are collectively convinced they know that every infinitesimal change that theoretical academia can model is directly attributable to man’s intervention. For sure collectively man does not lack imagination!

Ed Mertin
May 9, 2014 8:00 pm

I cannot possibly wish the upcoming El Niño turns out to be a moderate one and that it ends early. If we stay in this cold La Niña to La Nada, humans and animals both will suffer hard for much longer. Harsh weather conditions clearly will go on for a prolonged time as La Nada dominates, causing the jet stream to continue to snake and get stuck with the blocking high pressure areas.
Many people have died all over the globe in this cold pattern. So many livestock and crops have been lost. Locally, we have also lost a large number of mature trees in the plains and on the Ozark Plateau from the 2012 summer heat and drought, reminiscent of the ‘dust bowl’. Many of the trees already damaged from the unusually harsh 2009 ice storm that went from NE Oklahoma/SE Kansas to Ohio. There are houses that have been here 40 years that had their plumbing freeze up and bust for the first time this winter.
Everything in La Nada/La Niña weather gets blamed on anthropogenic global climate change anyway. That is, until people gather together to demand debunction junction from this lunacy. A lunacy that is just about as bad as prostituting our military to do regime changes based on lies. Unfortunately, the powerful only seem to recognize ‘we the people’ when we GATHER BIG, such as in the 1930’s when the courageous WWI veterans surrounded the White House convincing them that eventually there would be a removal of power in store for them if they didn’t straighten up and get off the dime. Since we are failing something like that, at least please don’t express a wish for more cold and suffering to convince the dunderheads to change their ways.

phlogiston
May 9, 2014 8:51 pm

Weather Dave, Bob Tisdale
Point taken about the Equatorial counter current. However its still wrong to give the impression that all the east Pacific el Nino warm water has immigrated from the west. A large part of it is due to the interruption of Peruvian coast cold upwelling. This directly warms the surface, as well as indirectly by slackening the trades (i.e. the Bjerknes feedback). Indeed el Nino was first recognised as a fishing, not meteorological phenomenon – the periodic crash of the huge Peruvian anchovy fishery caused by the cessation of nutrient upwelling and reduced plankton blooms.

bushbunny
May 9, 2014 9:07 pm

That’s interesting phlogiston, in the video of the answer to The Inconvenient Truth. One of the extras included a scientist who was hired by anchovy fishers in Canada I think, as to why some years these fish disappeared. Don’t quote me, but it was to do with solar activity and galactic atoms being diverted from our atmosphere, less rain. So less water flowing into the region where anchovies used to be found and necessary nutrients in the water.
When the Aswan dam was first erected, it stopped the annual flood that brought in fertile silt to the delta. The Delta fishing was destroyed, malaria was rampant and so was that snail, (although they have a vaccine for that now) Farmers had to use chemical fertilizers that made agricultural production was more expensive. The plankton blooms that fish relied on had disappeared. It took 30 years for it to come back.

phlogiston
May 10, 2014 6:29 am

Thanks again Bob.
BTW what is it that causes an el Nino to flip into a reactive, sometimes strong La Nina? Or is that a subject for another day?

Pamela Gray
May 10, 2014 9:24 am

sarc on (just in case someone is reading this who is a believer in the creds of Bill Nye):
My dear Bob, you said, “…the trade winds (blowing from east to west)…”. Now you know that Bill Nye, the ohhhh soooo sciency guy, has told us, complete with a fan demonstration, that the trade winds blow from the west to the east. You must correct this immediately because Bill Nye is a sciency guy and you are not, according to the latest criteria on who can “splain” this stuff to flat earth, moon movie people like me, and who cannot “splain” this.
sarc off (just in case someone is reading this who thinks everything I write is tongue in cheek non-serious stuff).

May 10, 2014 12:08 pm

Thanks, Bob. These GODAS animations rock and your charts are very good; an excellent view of the Pacific.

May 10, 2014 3:41 pm

According to my research this Kelvin wave is going to fizzle out and I expect neutral or La Niña conditions at the end of this year.
Nevertheless, the overall trend of the ENSO index is going to be positive for the coming years. I expect the ENSO index to be in weak or moderate El Niño condition during the end of next year, in other words between 2015/2016.
http://www.global-warming-and-the-climate.com/enso-and-tidal-forcing.htm
I am now concentration my research effort on the connection between solar activity and ENSO forcing.