NOAA: Another warm winter likely for western U.S., South may see colder weather Repeat of last year's extremely cold, snowy winter east of Rockies unlikely

Below average temperatures are favored in parts of the south-central and southeastern United States, while above-average temperatures are most likely in the western U.S., Alaska, Hawaii and New England, according to the U.S. Winter Outlook, issued today by NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.

While drought may improve in some portions of the U.S. this winter, California’s record-setting drought will likely persist or intensify in large parts of the state. Nearly 60 percent of California is suffering from exceptional drought – the worst category – with 2013 being the driest year on record. Also, 2012 and 2013 rank in the top 10 of California’s warmest years on record, and 2014 is shaping up to be California’s warmest year on record. Winter is the wet season in California, so mountainous snowfall will prove crucial for drought recovery. Drought is expected to improve in California’s southern and northwestern regions, but improvement is not expected until December or January.

“Complete drought recovery in California this winter is highly unlikely. While we’re predicting at least a 2 in 3 chance that winter precipitation will be near or above normal throughout the state, with such widespread, extreme deficits, recovery will be slow,” said Mike Halpert, acting director of NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center. “This outlook gives the public valuable information, allowing them to make informed decisions and plans for the season. It’s an important tool as we build a Weather-Ready Nation.”

NOAA_winter_outlook-14-15_temp NOAA_winter_outlook-14-15_precip

El Niño, an ocean-atmospheric phenomenon in the Tropical Pacific that affects global weather patterns, may still develop this winter. Climate Prediction Center forecasters announced on Oct. 9 that the ocean and atmospheric coupling necessary to declare an El Niño has not yet happened, so they continued the El Niño Watch with a 67 percent chance of development by the end of the year. While strong El Niño episodes often pull more moisture into California over the winter months, this El Niño is expected to be weak, offering little help.

The Precipitation Outlook favors above-average precipitation across the southern tier, from the southern half of California, across the Southwest, South-central, and Gulf Coast states, Florida, and along the eastern seaboard to Maine. Above-average precipitation also is favored in southern Alaska and the Alaskan panhandle. Below-average precipitation is favored in Hawaii, the Pacific Northwest and the Midwest.

Last year’s winter was exceptionally cold and snowy across most of the United States, east of the Rockies. A repeat of this extreme pattern is unlikely this year, although the Outlook does favor below-average temperatures in the south-central and southeastern states.

In addition, the Temperature Outlook favors warmer-than-average temperatures in the Western U.S., extending from the west coast through most of the inter-mountain west and across the U.S.-Canadian border through New York and New England, as well as Alaska and Hawaii.

The rest of the country falls into the “equal chance” category, meaning that there is not a strong enough climate signal for these areas to make a prediction, so they have an equal chance for above-, near-, or below-normal temperatures and/or precipitation.

The U.S. Seasonal Drought Outlook, updated today and valid through January, predicts drought removal or improvement in portions of California, the Central and Southern Plains, the desert Southwest, and portions of New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts.  Drought is likely to persist or intensify in portions of California, Nevada, Utah, Idaho, Oregon and Washington state. New drought development is likely in northeast Oregon, eastern Washington state, and small portions of Idaho and western Montana.

This seasonal outlook does not project where and when snowstorms may hit or provide total seasonal snowfall accumulations. Snow forecasts are dependent upon the strength and track of winter storms, which are generally not predictable more than a week in advance.

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old44
October 16, 2014 11:52 am

Worlds top scientists and they are so dopey they don’t know not to use use red lettering on a green background. Obviously none of them play golf.

October 16, 2014 11:53 am

“This outlook gives the public valuable information, allowing them to make informed decisions and plans for the season. It’s an important tool as we build a Weather-Ready Nation.”

We’ve already been given a National Right to Affordable Cellphone Service, even if the government has to pay for it, so anyone with reception should be able to call for help in a weather emergency, even the extra-powerful climate change-caused disasters.
But to really be a Weather-Ready Nation, shouldn’t we have a National Right for umbrellas? For area-suitable weather-resistant warm jackets and coats? Think of the children! If it can save the life of even one child, then it is worth it.
Meanwhile, what informed decisions should be made? NOAA said in your area there’s a greater than 50% chance it’ll be warmer. Does that mean the odds favor taking a chunk of that money you’ve been saving for winter heating bills and buying lottery tickets instead, because the odds are you won’t need it anyway?

October 16, 2014 11:53 am

As I understand it, these are not forecasts of what the weather will be like, but the chances of that weather event. So NOAA is saying that the western US has a greater than 50% chance of being warm, not that it will be warmer than normal. Where NOAA says equal chances, it means “we aren’t sure if it will be colder than normal or warmer than normal or just plain normal”.
I do believe that the 40% chance of drier Great Lakes region is spot on. Colder Great Lakes means less lake-effect snow. I also believe that 33% chance of a wetter eastern US is also spot on. The western Atlantic is very warm. Cold air going over warm ocean water helps nor’easters to form.
All-in-all, it looks like NOAA is expecting an El Nino to form since the temperature and precipitation looks like it was taken from this diagram, also found on the El Nino page.

Resourceguy
October 16, 2014 11:57 am

Better yet, just make it an equal chance map for 95 percent of the lower 48 state area except for a few heat islands around major cities. That would mitigate exposure to critique from all sides except professional conscience.

October 16, 2014 12:04 pm

Uh Huh, we’ll see.

October 16, 2014 12:19 pm

I wonder how this correlates with Al Gore’s travel schedule for the next couple of months.

Roy
October 16, 2014 12:34 pm

A repeat of this extreme pattern is unlikely this year, although the Outlook does favor below-average temperatures in the south-central and southeastern states.

Based on what exactly? Nearly-always-wrong models?
You would think with the poor model record, they would know better than to use them for forecasts that close enough in the future to bite them. Of course, like flipping a coin, they could be right. Even if only right in one area, it will be enough to save face.

October 16, 2014 12:35 pm

It might be interesting to compare NOAA forecast versus reality for election years in the last 10 or 20 years.

MattN
October 16, 2014 12:36 pm

Just for giggles, here’s what NOAA said last winter would be like: http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2013/20131121_winteroutlook.html
Not even REMOTELY close…

Thomas Englert
October 16, 2014 12:47 pm

Although the California drought is definitely bad, record-setting is an exaggeration if proxy studies are believable.

October 16, 2014 12:50 pm

When things are see-sawing like they have been this decade, it’s a SWAG. What happens after the see-saw stops is the big Q.

trafamadore
October 16, 2014 12:54 pm

What does the farmer’s almanac say:
http://www.almanac.com/weather/longrange

Reply to  trafamadore
October 16, 2014 1:09 pm

Ice cream sandwiches

herkimer
October 16, 2014 12:59 pm

I don’ agree with this probability forecast. The central US will likely have again a cold winter like last year with the exception of the west. The middle of the nation would again be unprepared if it followed this forecast in my opinion with fuel shortages ,salt shortages and lack of snow clearing infrastructure . The trend of winter temperatures anomalies shows declining winter temperatures for 17 years at -1.79 F /DECADE. since 1998.. Yes , not every year will be cold but the odds are better for cold than warm. These cold cycles last for years at least . Snow has already shown up in Colorado, and parts of Canada . Remember the 2010 cold winter which was an EL Nino winter

Elliott M. Althouse
October 16, 2014 1:10 pm

As Joe Bastardi says, “This is not a forecast”. It is a modeled probability chart. A forecast predicts actual departure from normal as he posts all the time on Weatherbell. His forecast last winter was uncannily good.

DDP
Reply to  Elliott M. Althouse
October 16, 2014 7:33 pm

It’s why he’s the only forecaster I really trust. Back in 2010 when the UK Met O claimed it would be a blah winter here, Joe predicted nearly a month before their seasonal forecast how cold it was going to get. Joe was correct on the weather absolutely nosediving to within a few days.
The MetO winter (or jut insert any season) forecasts have become nothing more than a three way 33% split on warmer winter/regular crappy winter/ colder winter simply so they can claim any level of accuracy to defer criticism and to maintain funding.

MrBungled
Reply to  DDP
October 17, 2014 8:03 am

+1
Keep in mind they are trying to forecast something inherently unpredictable. I respect the way they do it over there at WB and then stick to the forecast instead of flip flopping like most of the ‘experts’. imo of course

herkimer
October 16, 2014 1:10 pm

US WINTERS
Since 1998 in UNITED STATES all major temperature regions used by NCDC/NOAA show winter cooling trend for the 17 years.
US RATES OF WINTER COOLING 1998-2014 TREND PER US CLIMATE REGIONS*
OHIO VALLEY (CENTRAL) -2.5 F/decade
UPPER MIDWEST (EAST NORTH CENTRAL) -4.3
NORTH EAST -1.2
NORTH WEST -.0.8
SOUTH -1.6
SOUTH EAST –0.5
SOUTH WEST –1.3
WEST 0.1(flat)
WEST NORTH CENTRAL (NORTHERN ROCKIES) . -3.3
US winters show a cooling trend in every climate region with the exception of the WEST where the winter temperatures are flat
. US Winter temperature anomalies show a cooling trend of -1.79 F/decade since 1998(17 years)

Dave
October 16, 2014 1:38 pm

Now why don’t we get a post on this same topic from Joe Bastardi on the coming winter so we can compare.
I follow Joe’s Saturday summaries and as far as I can tell he blows the socks off of NOAA…
Dave

Kenneth Simmons
October 16, 2014 1:46 pm

Thanks for adding your insight Joe B. NOAA meteorologists are not allowed to forecast out-of-the-box. They have to adhere to the models, graphs, atmospheric factors listed in the guidelines set forth by the agency. It must be frustrating as a forecaster to give probabilities and ignore environmental factors affecting the weather.

Charles Nelson
October 16, 2014 2:45 pm

One of the things that it’s very hard for the ordinary person to grasp; is the speed at which big events can take place in nature. Here in Australia the drought was ‘permanent’, the Murray Darling River was ‘finished’ and Perth was about to become a ‘Ghost Metropolis’ because of water shortages.
Within ONE month the entire edifice of certainty that the Australian Warmist Authorities had carefully built over a 5 or 6 year period….was swept away.

garymount
October 16, 2014 3:02 pm

Dr. Tim Ball has shown us here on WUWT that Environment Canada issues reports on how well their predictions turned out. Doesn’t the U.S. agencies do this?
http://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/02/clip_image0081.jpg
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/02/25/government-weather-and-climate-forecasts-are-failures/

October 16, 2014 3:40 pm

I was told by an old Cherokee chief that it would be a much colder winter than normal When asked why , he replied that he had observed an exceptional number of palefaces gathering more firewood than normal.

eyesonu
Reply to  jim Steele
October 16, 2014 4:22 pm

Palefaces! That’s my recommendation for the new name for the Washington Redskins.
Ohh … I can hear it now …. persons of color are being left out of the naming process.

Editor
Reply to  jim Steele
October 16, 2014 5:52 pm

And the palefaces were gathering wood because the chief had told the tribe to prepare for a cold winter.
The canonical form from http://www2.seminolestate.edu/rrapalje/Jokes/Gathering_Firewood_for_Winter.htm

Gathering Firewood for Winter
As winter approached, the chief of an Indian tribe instructed his braves to go out and gather firewood. When the braves returned, wondering if they had enough wood, the chief contacted the local weather service to ask if they were expecting a severe winter. The representative from the weather service told him that indeed they were expecting a very cold winter.
Hearing this, the chief sent out his braves again on another search for firewood. When the Indians returned with additional firewood, the chief called the weather service again to confirm their weather forecast. Again, the chief was told that the weather service was expecting a VERY severe winter, so he sent the Indians out again to gather even MORE firewood.
When the braves returned from their third firewood search, the chief decided to call the weather service one more time. Again he was told that they were indeed expecting one of the most severe winters in many, many years.
Consumed with curiosity, the chief finally asked, “How do you at the weather service know that we are in for such a severe winter?”
Weather service reply: “Because all the Indians are out gathering firewood!”

John L.
October 16, 2014 4:52 pm

I’ll stick with the “Farmer’s Almanac” thank you.

Mike Wryley
October 16, 2014 8:33 pm

Numerous squirrels here in western Iowa have worked overtime to gather every walnut and acorn available whereas last year they were left laying on the ground, in fact I think some of them may have been undocumented aliens since there are red ones in addition to the usual black squirrels. I am sure this means we are in for a nasty cold winter with lots of snow. Or maybe it means the little bastards are making a comeback since the passing of my German Shorthairs, who pretty much ran them out of Dodge.

Pamela Gray
October 16, 2014 9:17 pm

Our Oregon state agriculture forecaster says early winter deep freeze followed by possible mild late winter. Because crop producers depend on this forecast, and his job depends on being right about agriculture forecasts, I tend to believe this guy over NOAA stuff.
http://www.oregon.gov/ODA/NRD/docs/dlongrange.pdf

ren
October 16, 2014 10:00 pm

Let’s see the current jet stream.
http://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/isobaric/250hPa/orthographic=-103.23,61.25,555
You can see a strong cooling northeastern Pacific and the North Atlantic.

ren
Reply to  ren
October 17, 2014 6:21 am
Lars P.
October 17, 2014 3:33 am

Huh, I understand from the comments above that NOAA is putting their prediction on ENSO, however when I looked at the oceans temperature I was struck by the wave of cold displayed here, a bit unusual picture:
http://weather.unisys.com/surface/sst_anom_new.gif
I know it is not the ENSO area, but I would guess this must be influencing the weather in the Northern Hemisphere?
It really looks like a lot of heat left the system to me? Is it due to low solar activity & clouds or is there cold surface water covering the warmer? Just wondering…

ren
Reply to  Lars P.
October 17, 2014 6:10 am
Pamela Gray
Reply to  ren
October 17, 2014 5:43 pm

We do indeed see a dropping pressure metric for the JFM graph, that rose since 1950 to around 1990 and then began a slide back down which continues now. When this metric is in negative territory we tend to see a loopy edge to the semi-permanent Arctic pressure system (which the jet stream, riding on this edge, mimics as well) with low pressure warm incursions into the upper Arctic latitudes and high pressure incursions of Arctic air into the lower latitudes.
Some evidence exists that this is due to decades long drifting of warmed ocean water from the equatorial band towards the poles, collecting there and helping to set up this stormy loopy edge via teleconnections between warmer ocean temperatures and colder atmospheric responses. Meanwhile, back at the equator, when that warmed water eventually exits the equatorial area, the equatorial band sets up the beginnings of the next up slope IE the positive phase of the JanFebMar AO. Note however, the evidence is slim in terms of observations, as we only have what appears to be a single cycle on record.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/precip/CWlink/daily_ao_index/JFM_season_ao_index.shtml