NOAA: La Niña is officially back

November 2017 La Niña update: She’s back!

Author:  Emily Becker

Well, it’s November, and the CPC/IRI ENSO forecast is declaring the presence of La Niña conditions! I could just link to my November 2016 post and head home for the day… but that would be no fun! There’s about a 65-75% chance that La Niña conditions will continue at least through the winter. As we head into our fifth “double dip” La Niña (an unofficial term for when neutral conditions briefly prevail in between La Niña winters) in the historical record, let’s dig into what we talk about when we talk about La Niña.

October 2017 sea surface temperature departure from the 1981-2010 average. Graphic by climate.gov; data from NOAA’s Environmental Visualization Lab.

A quick flashback

If you recall, last month there were several signs of the presence of La Niña conditions. East-central tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures were cooler than the long-term average, accompanied by signs of a La Niña-like atmospheric response (more clouds and rain over Indonesia, less over the central Pacific).

Sea surface temperatures in the Niño3.4 region during September came in at about 0.5°C cooler than the long-term average, the first step in our La Niña conditions decision tree. However, the sea surface temperature was showing some volatility, and we just weren’t confident enough in the second step of the flowchart—that the cooler sea surface would persist for several seasons—to be sure that La Niña’s seasonal pattern had locked in.

La Nina Diagnostic Flowchart

Flowchart showing decision process for determining La Niña conditions. Figure by Fiona Martin, adapted by Climate.gov.

What’s different this month?

In October, despite an active Madden-Julian Oscillation moving through the western Pacific (more on that in a minute), La Niña conditions dominated. Stepping through our flowchart, the sea surface temperature in the Niño3.4 region again averaged about 0.5°C cooler than average (check). Most of the computer models forecast that it will remain in weak La Niña territory (between 0.5°C and 1.0°C below average) through the spring (check).

Another factor bolstering forecasters’ confidence that La Niña will remain in place through the fall and winter 2017/18 is the substantial quantity of cooler-than-average waters below the tropical ocean surface. This will provide a source of cooler waters to the surface over the next few months.

Heat content in the upper few hundred meters of the tropical Pacific near the equator (5°N-5°S) from November 2016 (top of image) through October 2017 (bottom of image) compared to the 1981-2010 average. The western Pacific is on the left; the eastern Pacific is on the right. Each row of the image shows a 5-day average. Scan the image from top to bottom, and you can see the weakening and rebuilding of the La Niña cold pool in the central-eastern Pacific.  (Still not quite sure what you’re looking at? Read more about Hovmoller diagrams.) NOAA Climate.gov image, based on data provided by the Climate Prediction Center.

Finally, the signs of an atmospheric response I described above continued to be present during October (check). In addition to the clouds and rain pattern, the upper-level winds were stronger than average, another sign of a strengthened Walker Circulation. Also, the Southern Oscillation Index was positive, also indicating a stronger-than-average Walker Circulation. Add it all together, and you get… La Niña!

You promised me an MJO!

Indeed I did. The Madden-Julian Oscillation operates on subseasonal timescales, meaning on the order of weeks or months. The MJO is essentially an area of enhanced convection, storms and clouds that moves eastward along the equator, and can circle the globe in around 4-8 weeks. ENSO (the whole El Niño/La Niña system), on the other hand, is a seasonal, stationary pattern, lasting for at least several months in a row.

The MJO can move through the tropical Pacific and temporarily change conditions, including the winds near the surface.

Madden-Julian Oscillation schematic

The surface and upper-atmosphere structure of the MJO for a period when the enhanced convective phase (thunderstorm cloud) is centered across the Indian Ocean and the suppressed convective phase is centered over the west-central Pacific Ocean. Horizontal arrows pointing left represent wind departures from average that are easterly, and arrows pointing right represent wind departures from average that are westerly. The entire system shifts eastward over time, eventually circling the globe and returning to its point of origin. Climate.gov drawing by Fiona Martin.

The near-surface winds in the tropics, called the trade winds, have a close relationship to the surface temperature of the ocean. The trades normally blow from east to west, helping to cool the surface and keep warmer water “piled up” toward Indonesia. If these winds relax, the surface waters in the central and eastern Pacific can warm up. This is a critical feedback mechanism for ENSO.

During La Niña, the trade winds are stronger than average, keeping the surface waters cooler (vice versa during El Niño). If the MJO is active, it can temporarily change the wind patterns. This past month, the MJO was active and moved through from the Indian Ocean into the western hemisphere, weakening the surface winds.  But despite the winds temporarily weakening due to the MJO, the ocean remained cool.  This leads forecasters to believe that La Niña conditions are in place and we can now see the forest for the trees.

This winter’s La Niña, although expected to remain weak, is likely to have some effect on North American weather and climate this winter. Be sure to check out Mike’s recent post for details on NOAA’s 2017/18 Winter Outlook, and stay tuned to the ENSO Blog for further updates on the great La Niña of 2017/18.

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crackers345
November 11, 2017 6:59 pm

la nina makes it even more
odd that uah’s oct temperature
was a record high for
octobers….

astonerii
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 7:25 pm

When you can just adjust the numbers any way you like, I do not know why you would be surprised…

Reply to  astonerii
November 11, 2017 9:57 pm

I it isn’t that simple; you need an accepted Mosel before you can do that.

Reply to  astonerii
November 11, 2017 9:59 pm

Mosel? Motel? Model?

[The mods point out that, if you – the original writer of wrong letters – do not know which was the right letter you writed wrongly, then we – the mods of writing all letters rightly, cannot hope to right the wrongly writed letter the write way. .mod]

Auto
Reply to  astonerii
November 12, 2017 1:31 pm

An acceptable Moselle – a white wine with a tangy woody flavour, hints of sharp raspberry, and an oriental aftertaste, should bake an accepted Moselle.
I prefers reds.

Auto

Auto
Reply to  astonerii
November 12, 2017 1:32 pm

– bake – ‘make’
Apologies.

My fault.

Auto

michael hart
Reply to  astonerii
November 13, 2017 2:49 am

It’s never too early for a Spätlese.

crackers345
Reply to  astonerii
November 13, 2017 10:13 pm

afonz: it’s too
bad you don’t understand
the science of the adjustments.

have you ever tried to?

btw, after adjustments the
long-term warming trend is
lower than before them.

so go ahead and calculate
trends using the raw data if you want
.

let us know your results.

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 7:33 pm

No it doesn’t.
You are proving
your ignorance
again.
Warm anomaly
was not in
La Nina regions.
Remnants.

Editor
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 7:41 pm

The UAH data from the “lower” troposphere is some 14,000 ft (4,500m?). It takes a few months for SST changes to propagate up there.

Even so, Roy Spencer and John Christy are surprised at the difference. See http://www.drroyspencer.com/2017/11/uah-global-temperature-update-for-october-2017-0-63-deg-c/ for more.

TRM
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 12, 2017 10:44 am

Being real scientists they are intrigued by the things that happen and leave us scratching our heads. That is where we learn from.

crackers345
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 13, 2017 10:11 pm

ric – the LT number is an integral
over the entire lower troposphere.
see the weighting functions
originally derived
by Christy & Spencer.

Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 9:45 pm

crachers by name, crackers by nature….probably a lot of people have written that…I don’t know why you bother dude? Your true calling is lying to little children…that’s the socialist way. They believe any old crap. This is the adults site where people think before they speak, and are free to say what they believe, this is something you will need to work on if you want to be accepted as an equal amongst adults…I know that this is not the socialist way…its just our way.
We all think you are an idiot. A man amongst children, but a child amongst men.

Simon
Reply to  Bill Snape
November 12, 2017 10:11 am

Bill Snape
After you have finished frothing at the mouth and acting like a child bully, maybe you could address where crackers345 is wrong? I think you will find there is a lot of head scratching from both sides of the argument as to why the satellite data is not declining (lie it did after the 1998 event). Maybe you have a theory, or perhaps you just prefer being a thug?

crackers345
Reply to  Bill Snape
November 13, 2017 10:10 pm

bill has no
reply, but he’s
a very good
name
caller.

Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 11:22 pm

why is that Cracky?
UAH measures LT temp… 1-5 km atmosphere.
ENSO 3.4 is a measure in tropical salt water.

Do you think those two very different bodies are physically connected in a fast response?

If you do, then your screenname is appropriate.

Hugs
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 2:18 am

We don’t live in the troposphere.

By the way, why do you waste your time trying to be the first commenter? Do you have a life?

Urederra
Reply to  Hugs
November 12, 2017 7:36 am

It looks like he is posting from a cellphone.

Editor
Reply to  Hugs
November 12, 2017 9:44 am

I find that the “first replies” are generally poorly thought out and not worth dwelling on. Then other people tack on to them to get their comments high up. I preferred the unthreaded style, despite its limitations.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Hugs
November 12, 2017 3:21 pm

Hugs, radiative gas theory (as reflected in the IPCC climate models) demands that the troposphere drive surface temperatures.

The lack of a tropical tropospheric “hot spot” fundamentally belies the CO2-centric climate models. It is so bad that IPCC AR5 arbitrarily reduced model-projected warming that the models otherwise get from their reliance on a high TCR/ECS.

F. Leghorn
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 4:47 am

Weather happens.

Auto
Reply to  F. Leghorn
November 12, 2017 1:45 pm

In maritime transportation – ship happens!
See –
http://www.cargolaw.com/

Countryman & McDaniel. I have no connection, but enjoy their accident photos and commentary.
And have used the snaps when trying to raise awareness of easily accidents happen.
Not least in enclosed spaces.
Which do, reliably, kill.

Note the tagged site now appears to require subscription for up-to-date news.

Auto

richard verney
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 6:45 am

There is several months lag between cold SSTs and the satellite responding to such conditions, so do not expect to see a response before January, maybe February.

Further, the satellite is a lot less sensitive to La Nina conditions than it is to El Nino. This is possibly due to convection. In warm El Nino conditions there is more convection bringing with it warmer air to the altitude at which the satellite makes its measurements.

With cold SSTs there is reduced convection to high altitude and thus a more muted response.

Temperatures over short time scales are not of particular interest, let us wait and see what happens.

Pamela Gray
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 9:05 am

Crackers makes a silly uninformed comment. Land temperatures lag El Niño conditions. Therefor after an El Niño dissipates, it is usually still warm on land when La Niña conditions appear.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  crackers345
November 13, 2017 8:18 am

Faced with a warm September but a not quite record October, the Environment Canada rep interviewed by the CBC slipped in the stat that September and October were together a record. Clever sleight of lip. It gave the impression that both were records. Neat hey? Anything to make sure everything we hear is ‘on message’.

November 11, 2017 7:04 pm

Australian BoM outlook …
http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/#tabs=Overview

While the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) remains neutral, the Bureau’s ENSO Outlook is currently at La Niña WATCH. La Niña WATCH means there is approximately a 50% chance of La Niña forming in late 2017. Climate models note that if La Niña does occur, it is likely to be short lived and weak, and effects upon Australian climate less than during the last La Niña in 2010–12.

Tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs) have cooled since late winter. However, recent cooling has stalled slightly due to a pulse of tropical activity (known as the Madden-Julian Oscillation). Cooling is expected to resume in the coming fortnight. Atmospheric indicators of ENSO, such as the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) and cloudiness near the Date Line have shown signs of shifting into a La Niña-like state.

All international climate models suggest further cooling of the tropical Pacific is likely, with most models reaching La Niña thresholds in late 2017. Six of eight models suggest that these levels will persist long enough to be considered an event. If La Niña does develop, it is likely to be weak and short-lived.

La Niña events typically bring above average rainfall to eastern Australia during late spring and summer. However, current temperature patterns in the Indian Ocean would typically push Australia’s climate into a drier phase. Hence current climate outlooks do not favour typical La Niña rainfall patterns across Australia for November to January. Weak La Niña events can also increase the chance of prolonged heatwaves for southeast Australia.

Reply to  waclimate
November 11, 2017 10:03 pm

It’s comforting to know that the Oz BOM has so many climate models to choose from and therefore always be correct.

Urederra
Reply to  John in Oz
November 12, 2017 7:42 am

It also has several temperature datasets which makes the picking and choosing even easier. and if there is no match, there is always the option of adjusting temps.

Oh, boy, it is so easy to be a climate scientist.

Reply to  waclimate
November 11, 2017 10:21 pm

The BOM has been so wrong about so much recently.
I almost feel like betting that it’s right this time!

Reply to  Charles Gerard Nelson
November 12, 2017 12:32 am

The Bom ENSO outlooks are fairly amusing. Look through their archives to 14 February 2017 …

http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/wrap-up/archive/20170214.archive.shtml#tabs=Outlooks

Climate models surveyed by the Bureau indicate that ENSO-neutral conditions are most likely for the remainder of the southern hemisphere summer and into autumn. However, all models indicate the central Pacific is likely to warm over the coming months, with some reaching El Niño thresholds in winter. This suggests ENSO-neutral or El Niño are the most likely scenarios for the second half of 2017.

Then look at the most recent outlook from 8 November 2017 …

http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/wrap-up/archive/20171108.archive.shtml#tabs=Outlooks

International climate models surveyed by the Bureau indicate that further cooling of equatorial Pacific Ocean sea surface temperatures is expected during spring and summer. All of the eight models anticipate that SSTs will reach or surpass La Niña thresholds by January, with most reaching the threshold during November.

Apart from every single model and outlook being completely wrong, they were spot on.

Reply to  waclimate
November 12, 2017 3:26 am

I agree with BoM on this. No La Niña conditions yet. Last week Niño 3.4 temperature anomaly was -0.37°C. Not cold enough for La Niña yet, as the temperature has to be below -0.5°C for at least 5 months, and that is only one of the conditions.

“In the United States, an appearance of La Niña happens for at least five months of La Niña conditions. However, each country and island nation has a different threshold for what constitutes a La Niña event, which is tailored to their specific interests.[25] The Japan Meteorological Agency for example, declares that a La Niña event has started when the average five month sea surface temperature deviation for the NINO.3 region, is over 0.5 °C (0.90 °F) cooler for 6 consecutive months or longer.[26]”
Wikipedia>

Only 4 months ago Niño 3.4 anomaly was +0.5°C and they were talking about El Niño conditions.

http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/monitoring/nino3_4.png

I think they are just ignoring their own rules and jumping the gun, declaring a La Niña just because their models say so. When the models turn out to be wrong, they’ll just declare a weak short La Niña instead of ENSO neutral conditions, that are what best describes the present situation where temperatures are oscillating between +0.5 and -0.5°C.

Let’s not forget what models predictions are worth. This was February 2017 forecast with what happened later:
comment image

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 8:27 am

Javier

That last chart is hilarious! Wow! Talk about a useless set of model runs. Any tuning going on over there? Any lessons being incorporated? What is set of runs being shown currently?

Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo
November 13, 2017 9:03 am

Crispin, ENSO models are a good example of climate models limited ability to predict future climate. ECMWF ENSO model is actually well considered. However, it has failed spectacularly already twice, when it predicted a strong El Niño in 2014, and again in 2017. The main problem is that ENSO has proven to be unpredictable so far.

The web page for ECMWF ENSO plumes is here:
https://www.ecmwf.int/en/forecasts/charts/catalogue/seasonal_system5_public_nino_plumes?time=2017110100,0,2017110100&nino_area=NINO3-4
You can select month and region.

crackers345
Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 9:43 pm

Javier, ENSOs aren’t
“climate,” they are
natural fluctuations
that appear underneath
climate change.

over a long-enough
interval (~several decades)
they average to zero — or,
at least, used to, before
agw

Reply to  crackers345
November 14, 2017 1:25 am

over a long-enough
interval (~several decades)
they average to zero

A commonly held belief unsupported by evidence. Those that study past ENSO activity, report great variability over time in the decadal, centennial, and millennial time frames.

Hans-Georg
Reply to  waclimate
November 12, 2017 4:57 am

Thats a very odd statement from BOM. On their own side there is a equatorial cross section with a very huge amount of much colder than normal water below the surface. From 11.09 :
http://www.bom.gov.au/cgi-bin/wrap_fwo.pl?IDYOC002.gif
Therefore, it would be far better, BOM would reckon with a stronger La Nina.
CFS V 2:
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/CFSv2/imagesInd3/nino34Mon.gif

Hans-Georg
Reply to  Hans-Georg
November 12, 2017 4:59 am
Editor
Reply to  Hans-Georg
November 12, 2017 5:18 am

Images have to end with an image extension, see the test page (link at top).

http://www.bom.gov.au/fwo/IDYOC002.gif

Editor
November 11, 2017 7:26 pm

I was thinking about writing a post on this. Unless the rules have changed, the title is bogus. La Niña is La Niña conditions for a long time. The text refers to La Niña conditions.

I wrote on Facebook in a non-climate group:

I hate climate.gov. They recently posted an article with the headline “November 2017 La Niña update: She’s back!”

Well, she’s not, we’re in marginal La Niña conditions. It takes five months of three month averages of La Niña conditions before a La Niña is officially declared.

Google News shows stories all over that say we’re in a La Niña. I doubt all of them are due to the climate.gov site, but geez, I thought they had some idea and respect for science.

We are in “La Niña conditions,” defined as a particular patch of Pacific equatorial water is more than 0.5C cooler than average.

This is more technical than you probably want: http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/ensodisc.shtml

Here’s a more precise definition from https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/teleconnections/enso/enso-tech.php

SST anomalies equal to or greater than 0.5°C (0.9°F) in the Niño 3.4 region (comprising portions of Niño regions 3 and 4, from 170°W to 120°W longitude) are indicative of ENSO warm phase (El Niño) conditions, while anomalies less than or equal to –0.5°C (–0.9°F) are associated with cool phase (La Niña) conditions. Niño 3.4 SST anomalies are averaged over the three months ending with the current month, and that value is called the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI). If the ONI exhibits warm or cool phase conditions for at least five consecutive values, it officially becomes an El Niño or La Niña event.

commieBob
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 11, 2017 9:50 pm

If the ONI exhibits warm or cool phase conditions for at least five consecutive values, it officially becomes an El Niño or La Niña event.

That was my first reaction. We could be in a La Nina right now but it won’t be official until enough time has passed. If the 3.4 SST warms up then we are not now in La Nina. If the 3.4 SST stays cool then we are now in La Nina.

The article seems to make a case that La Nina conditions will persist for long enough to mean that we are now in La Nina. It’s a forecast.

richard verney
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 12, 2017 6:49 am

Quite. I agree. When I read the headline, this was my initial reaction and I was going to make a comment to that effect, but you have covered the position very well.

We do not yet have a full blown La Nina. We will have to wait and see whether it actually materialises.

I think that the warmists are desperate to have a full blown La Nina since the 2016 peak has fallen away quite significantly.

Editor
November 11, 2017 7:32 pm

BTW, our ENSO meter over on the right hand nav bar uses data from Australia’s BoM, their data was fetching more reliably than NCEP’s. I update it automatically on Monday morning. Data at http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/nino_3.4.txt, e.g. October data:

20171002,20171008,-0.01
20171009,20171015,-0.38
20171016,20171022,-0.51
20171023,20171029,-0.29
20171030,20171105,-0.37
DWR54
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 12, 2017 1:08 am

BOM also has a bigger temperature anomaly threshold than NOAA for El Nino/La Nina conditions. I believe it’s +/- 0.8 for a “sustained period” (not sure if this period has a defined length – can’t find a reference).

Earthling2
November 11, 2017 7:35 pm

Does this mean the climate ‘pause’ the last 18-19 years will continue? If temperatures at some point don’t match all those models from the last 15-20 years, then at what point do we have to have a reassessment about the very premise at the heart of CAGW? People here on this planet will not stand for this forever.

AndyG55
Reply to  Earthling2
November 11, 2017 7:42 pm

Real temperatures are already well below the models.

Only the very peak of the El Nino came close (UAH in red)

I bit of cooling will make them look even more ridiculous.
comment image

kenji
Reply to  AndyG55
November 11, 2017 8:39 pm

Wake me up when the chart(s) extend(s) back through a reasonable historic time scale, with every appropriate caveat about the “inferred” temperature accuracy. And if the chart wiggles and lurches ONLY since 1900 … Then I might PANIC and voluntarily surrender my Natural Born FREEDOM and hard-earned $$$ to “save the planet”. Until then, I will consider all of this just a masturbatory diversion from solving REAL WORLD problems.

crackers345
Reply to  AndyG55
November 11, 2017 9:25 pm

in what data do u
see a 19-yr pause?

crackers345
Reply to  AndyG55
November 11, 2017 9:26 pm

cite for graph?

TonyL
Reply to  AndyG55
November 11, 2017 9:45 pm

@ crackers345

in what data do u
see a 19-yr pause?

Here is my take on the UAH data set.comment image

AndyG55
Reply to  AndyG55
November 11, 2017 10:20 pm

There are actually TWO zero trend periods in the UAH and RSS satellite temperature data., separated by the 1998 El Nino.

1980 – 1997
comment image

and 2001 – 2015.5
comment image

crackers345
Reply to  AndyG55
November 11, 2017 10:40 pm

cherry picking at
its finest.

AndyG55
Reply to  AndyG55
November 12, 2017 12:12 am

No crackhead
Understanding
of climate
systems
Do you DENY that
There was
an El Nino from
1998 -2001?
Do you DENY that a
n El Nino started
mid 2015?
Why display
your IGNORANCE
so BLATANTLY.

paqyfelyc
Reply to  AndyG55
November 12, 2017 5:53 am

let’s resume crackers in 3 post
crackers: I don’t believe that any pause happened, try to show it to me
andy: np, here are 2 of them
crackers: cherry-pick! you don’t have the right to do that. I still don’t believe that any pause happened

In a math classroom that would
crackers: I don’t believe that x²=1 has any solution, try to show it to me
andy: np, here are 2 of them: +1 and -1
crackers: cherry-pick! you don’t have the right to do that. I still don’t believe that x²=1 has any solution

everyone else: [facepalm]

richard verney
Reply to  AndyG55
November 12, 2017 6:54 am

cherry picking at its finest.

There is no cherry picking. It is simply looking at all the data from the satellite data set removing the natural ENSO warming so as to see whether there is any signal to non natural event such as CO2.

Reply to  AndyG55
November 12, 2017 9:09 am

crackers345,

cite for graph?

The graph is mine. The data is from KNMI explorer. AndyG55 pasted a UAH graph from a different baseline period in red. I’ll update it in January, although since July temperatures haven’t really gone down. This might change during the winter and spring, specially if a La Niña finally shows up.

TonyL
Reply to  Earthling2
November 11, 2017 8:31 pm

Does this mean the climate ‘pause’ the last 18-19 years will continue?

Speaking of UAH data:
No, “the pause” is not coming back any time soon. A weak La Nina will pull UAH temps down to more “average” levels. A return to “the pause” at the previous level requires temps to be so low for two years as to be implausible.
There is a very interesting conjecture that strong El Nino events cause a step change in the global temperature. If this is so, we may see a new pause at a higher level, but it will take 10 years to find out.

AndyG55
Reply to  TonyL
November 11, 2017 9:01 pm

But the temperatures will quite likely drop down to the level of the pause before the El Nino.

Calculated linear trends are badly affected by transient and step type events,

… without really showing what is really going on.

crackers345
Reply to  TonyL
November 11, 2017 9:27 pm

tony, ensos are natural variations.
over a long enough time period they
average to near zero. that’s why
scientists look at 30+ year trends
for the AGW signal.

crackers345
Reply to  TonyL
November 11, 2017 9:36 pm

this will likely be the warmest la nina on record
just as 2015-6 was the
warmest el nino
on record.
these enso years keep
getting warmer.
why?

AndyG55
Reply to  TonyL
November 11, 2017 10:22 pm

30 years is NOT a long period of time

It is the time of HALF the AMO oscillation.

It is a piddlingly small time.

2 El Ninos in 38 years of satellite data

2 big, totally natural El Ninos in a row.. WHOOPY-DOO !!

You seem to be a mathematical imbecile, crackpot !

AndyG55
Reply to  TonyL
November 11, 2017 10:25 pm

Take your crackpot blinkers off and look at the strong solar cycles of the last 70 years,

and the ocean cycles of the AMO and PDO.

If you don’t comprehend these basic climate drivers,

you really should go back to primary school at not skip so much class this time.

AndyG55
Reply to  TonyL
November 11, 2017 10:30 pm

“they
average to near zero.”

Yes, it looks
like once the
2015 El Nino
subsides com-
pletely, the temp-
erature will drop
back down
to where it
was
before the
El Nino.

afonzarelli
Reply to  TonyL
November 11, 2017 10:50 pm

When temps return to where they were in ’02 when the temp stopped rising, then the pause will be back. It will take significant cooling below the level of the pause for trend lines to read zero. (at which point the pause will have been long gone, being replaced by what we call cooling)…

RACookPE1978
Editor
Reply to  TonyL
November 12, 2017 8:54 am

tony, ensos are natural variations.
over a long enough time period they
average to near zero. that’s why
scientists look at 30+ year trends
for the AGW signal.

What evidence do you have to make that claim?

I know it is often “claimed” by the professionally-funded CAGW apologist/alarmist community, but I have never seen any evidence that your claim is true.

AndyG55
Reply to  TonyL
November 12, 2017 11:11 am

The step change is pretty obvious.
comment image

crackers345
Reply to  Earthling2
November 11, 2017 9:33 pm

kenji – why is the planet warming?

kenji
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 10:23 pm

Natural forces that we do not yet fully understand. Yet there is no $$ in pursuing natural causes of temperature deviations, so no one is looking. The $$ is in creeping Marxist takeover Western capitalist societies under the guise of “saving the planet” from something we do not know exists.

In the meantime, here comes El Nino, La Nina, the Polar Vortex, ad retchinum. All I know is HOW DAMN MUCH $$$$ Jerry Brown, the CAPUC, and PG&E make me PAY (in the name of “greenness”) to heat my house and drive my automobile. And it appears as though its getting COLdDdER

kenji
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 10:23 pm
AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 10:28 pm

crackpot, why did the climate cool to the COLDEST period in 10,000 years.?

Be very thankful there has been some slight and totally beneficial warming.

and be VERY thankful for the fossil fuels that allow people like you to live in your inner city ghettos,

safely tucked away from any actual REALITY.

Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 10:38 pm

Thanks for coming on Crackers. We need the likes of you here. Your faith in the official numbers, your alarm over a 1˚C variation in the ‘observed’ Global temperature over 40 years…are you sure now that the ‘observed’ warming isn’t bolstered by say Greenland being at minus 17˚C when it would normally be at minus 20˚C?
Because if you understood basic physics you would understand that the warming of Polar regions in winter…well that would actually be an example of Global Cooling…because there’s not much in the way of radiative transfer going on up there in winter is there? And all that Ice Mass Gain in Greenland…how do you ‘feel’ about that? Cognitive dissonance right?
But as I said thanks for coming on, you’re always welcome, as a poster child for your cult you make a good practice target!

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 10:41 pm

Charles – what is the area of
greenland,
compared to the
globe?

gwan
Reply to  crackers345
November 11, 2017 11:47 pm

Crackers You crack me up .Do you want all the Ice in Greenland where you live .According to the IPPC the Ice was supposed to have but all melted by now .It looks like the northern hemisphere is going to have a cold winter and its starting early .Twenty years ago we were being told that snow falls in many areas of the world would stop and your children would never see snowfalls in areas where they only got a few weeks of snow a year..
Wake up the Vikings farmed in Greenland in the Medieval warm period a thousand years ago and with all this warming you are raving about because you were told that 97% of scientists said it was real and dangerous they still cannot farm there .
You might just learn something if you take your time and actually read these articles posted on WUWT.
The satellite and weather balloon record since 1979 shows little warming and the surface record has been deliberately altered .
How do you explain that the two longest running temperature records in the world from 1880 till present show NIL ,NONE ,NOT ANY . warming and they show that the 1930s and 1940s were actually warmer than at present .
No man made warming signal has been identified and the climate is driven by many things but CO2 is
a very very minor factor which has been blown up out of all proportion .
If you believe that CO2 controls the climate you would have to believe in magic .

PLANET IS

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 12:16 am

Greenland Ice Area is actually pretty much at its MAXIMUM in 8000 years
comment image

And any changes in Total Ice Mass since 1900 are basically immeasurable.
comment image

Certainly the gravity based GRACE data is nonsense because of the huge moving magma sack underneath.

Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 12:29 am

Greenland is where much of the world’s ice is Cracker…or are you ‘denying’ that?
The two ice sheets on Earth today cover most of Greenland and Antarctica. During the last ice age, ice sheets also covered much of North America and Scandinavia. Together, the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets contain more than 99 percent of the freshwater ice on Earth.
Quick Facts on Ice Sheets | National Snow and Ice Data Center
https://nsidc.org/cryosphere/quickfacts/icesheets.html

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 12:34 am

Charles, Glad you mentioned Antarctica.

No warming in the satellite data (ie usually unaffected by EL Nino events)
comment image

Total Ice Mass changes since 1900 are HORRENDOUS !!
comment image

Stephen Richards
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 1:25 am

The whole planet isn’t warming.

Hugs
Reply to  crackers345
November 12, 2017 2:31 am

We don’t know if the planet is warming. It has warmed a little bit since 1950 and a little bt more since 1850. It is questionable if it is as warm as it has been during this interglacial. It is now probably cooler than during the peak of the previous interglacial, but advocates are working hard to get a lower estimate for the Eemian peak 100ka ago.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
November 13, 2017 10:17 pm

hugs – of course
we know the planet
is warming – ice is
melting, and sea level
is rising. these are macro
indications of a warmer
planet.

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
November 13, 2017 10:31 pm

kenji, dude — a snapshot
of us-only temps says
absolutely nothing
about climate change.
or weather
change.
capisce?

crackers345
Reply to  crackers345
November 13, 2017 10:34 pm

charles GN: yes,
i deny that. most of the
world’s ice is in
antarctica.

AndyG55
Reply to  crackers345
November 13, 2017 10:41 pm

crackpot. sea
ice is above
90-95% of extent of
last 10,00 years
warming only
from El Nino
No human signa-
ture in real data

AndyG55
Reply to  Earthling2
November 12, 2017 11:16 am

Aligned 1980 as close as I could with HadCrud.

UAH will cool some over the next couple of years, making the CMIP look like a CHIMP.!

I’m reckoning by 2020 UAH will be somewhere around the 0 to +0.2 anomaly level.

Reply to  Earthling2
November 12, 2017 11:43 am

There are actually TWO zero trend periods in the UAH and RSS satellite temperature data., separated by the 1998 El Nino.

The first trend is not zero, the second trend is negative but warmer than the first.
comment image

Trends for UAH 6.0

1980 to 1997 is +0.8C / Century.
2001 to 2015.5 is -1.2C / Century
1980 to 2015.5 is +1.1C / Century

Only one of these is statistically significant.

AndyG55
Reply to  Bellman
November 13, 2017 10:49 pm

You have fallen into a basic mathematical trap when putting linear trends through cyclic data

The trend is PURELY an artifact of the way the cycles happen to occur.

Basic clue is that if you don’t know what you are doing… don’t do it.

What is the calculated linear trend of each of these graphs.?
comment image
comment image

Reply to  Bellman
November 14, 2017 9:16 am

AndyG55,

You have fallen into a basic mathematical trap when putting linear trends through cyclic data

The trend is PURELY an artifact of the way the cycles happen to occur.

Basic clue is that if you don’t know what you are doing… don’t do it.

Enlighten me then. If the UAH data is just cyclical data, how did you deduce that “There are actually TWO zero trend periods in the UAH and RSS satellite temperature data.”? Id the data cyclic or does it show a step change?

AndyG55
Reply to  Bellman
November 18, 2017 2:32 am

I’m not here to try to teach mathematical basics to a primary school child.

I don’t have the time or patience.

Reply to  Bellman
November 18, 2017 6:47 am

I’m not here to try to teach mathematical basics to a primary school child.

That’s a pity. I was really hoping you could explain what you meant about cyclical data. My first thought was that you were talking about the 60 year AMO cycle, but that doesn’t make sense because that would imply the entire era of satellite data was rising continously, whilst you claim that it “clearly” shows a discontinous jump in the middle of two flat trends.

Then I thought you might mean a shorter cycle, and were suggesting I was cherry picking trends by starting at a peak and finishing on a low point. Butthat doesn’t make sense as the short trend periods I used were exactly the ones you had pointed to to claim there were two periods of zero warming. Moreover, if you are claiming there’s a cycle which can mask the actual trends, it would make it possible that your choice of start and end dates could result in an apparent flat trend, whilst ignoring the constant rise in temperatures.

Sorry to have wasted your time.

crackers345
Reply to  Bellman
November 19, 2017 6:22 pm

Bellman commented – “Trends for UAH 6.0 ….2001 to 2015.5 is -1.2C / Century”

this is a very very obvious
cherry pick, and wrong even at
that. the actual number
is +0.8 C/century

Reply to  Bellman
November 20, 2017 6:51 am

this is a very very obvious cherry pick

Yes, I was trying to make a point about AndyG55’s cherry-picking when he claimed there were two zero trends,

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/11/11/noaa-la-nina-is-officially-back/comment-page-1/#comment-2663341

But I’ve just noticed I had a typo, the 2001 – 2015.5 trend should be -0.12 C / century, not -1.2 C.

November 11, 2017 8:08 pm

It is “La Nina conditions.”

It is not officially a La Nina yet. By definition: by historical standards, to be classified as a full-fledged El Niño or La Niña episode, these thresholds must be exceeded for a period of at least 5 consecutive overlapping 3 month seasons

So…
Sep-Oct-Nov (current)
Oct-Nov-Dec
Nov-Dec-Jan
Dec–Jan-Feb
Jan-Feb-Mar.

That probably won’t happen until Mach 2018.

noaaprogrammer
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
November 11, 2017 9:54 pm

Mach 2018 is pretty fast!

Reply to  noaaprogrammer
November 11, 2017 10:42 pm

R matey.
Can you spell that without any R’s?

T-H-A-T.

noaaprogrammer
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
November 12, 2017 1:41 pm

The way I heard that riddle was via this spoken jingo:

Railroad crossing,
Watch out for the cars.
Can you spell that,
Without any R’s!

T-H-A-T

November 11, 2017 9:03 pm

“Stepping through our flowchart, the sea surface temperature in the Niño3.4 region again averaged about 0.5°C cooler than average (check).:

But area averages of temperture dont make sense I thought?
And .5C? do we really have enough accuracy and measurements in the huge area to say its different by .5C?

Clearly La Nina does not exist

noaaprogrammer
Reply to  Steven Mosher
November 11, 2017 9:58 pm

Yeah, ‘”temperature” don’t make sense’ to me either!

noaaprogrammer
Reply to  noaaprogrammer
November 11, 2017 9:59 pm

Why did autocorrect work for me, but not Mosher?

Editor
Reply to  noaaprogrammer
November 12, 2017 5:25 am

It’s a function of your browser, not HTTP or HTML.

Reply to  Steven Mosher
November 11, 2017 10:28 pm

The real data crime that interpolation does is averaging across large latitudinal bands.
The extreme example would be to interpolate from +90N to -90S. The equator would be well below freezing in that infill.
The surface data set is infilled junk, i.e. personal WAGs.

Reply to  Steven Mosher
November 11, 2017 10:41 pm

Mosh. Getting a little desperate now, right?
Thanks for letting us know. By the way…
how are you feeling about President Trump?

Grant A. Brown
Reply to  Steven Mosher
November 13, 2017 7:39 am

Steven Mosher: Taking your opponent’s premises and proving that their conclusion STILL does not follow is a time-honoured and powerful argumentative technique.

donald penman
November 11, 2017 9:07 pm

People think that the change In temperature in this part of the ocean is the most important thing in the world but I think this is more important because this does affect me.
http://www.natice.noaa.gov/pub/ims/ims_gif/DATA/cursnow_asiaeurope.gif
http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/meant80n.uk.php
http://ocean.dmi.dk/arctic/icedrift_anim/index.uk.php

November 11, 2017 9:39 pm

The latest ONI Index available is ASO 2017 at -0.4 and so has not reached the La Nina thresh hold of -0.5 . How can NOAA say “La Niña is officially back” ?

crackers345
Reply to  Ashok Patel
November 11, 2017 10:09 pm

and i thought ONI had to be <= 0.5
for 5 months to call and ENSO. what
happened to that?

Reply to  Ashok Patel
November 12, 2017 3:34 am

They change their own rules whenever they want. For some reason they want a La Niña even if the conditions they used to define it have not happened yet.

Past weak Niño 3.4 temperatures were at -0.37°C, and 4 months ago they were at +0.5°C. Clearly not a La Niña yet.

Reply to  Javier
November 12, 2017 4:59 am

Hmm, last week Niño 3.4 temperatures were at -0.37°C. A comment editor would be nice.

Charles May
Reply to  Javier
November 12, 2017 10:44 am

Javier

I owe you some thanks for what you said almost a year ago on something similar. I spent some time and I think the issues I had with my Nino region work have been fixed. For the three Nino regions that I furnished charts for the data that I use consists of monthly data from 1854 to 1990, weekly data from 1990 until 2014 and then daily data after 2014. The charts furnished are only for the daily data.

Nino Region 1.2

https://1drv.ms/i/s!AkPliAI0REKhgZYsVVhGVhdC8F4HZw

For all the data going back to 1854 the correlation coefficient is 0.855. For the portion shown in the graph which are the daily data the correlation coefficient is 0.87. Region 1.2 has the noisiest data of all the regions and has the lowest correlation coefficients.

Nino Region 3.0

https://1drv.ms/i/s!AkPliAI0REKhgZYrsy2pmeUpgMrrSA

For the full range of data going back to 1854 the correlation coefficient is 0.928 and for the daily portion shown in the graph the correlation coefficient is 0.943.

Nino Region 3.4

https://1drv.ms/i/s!AkPliAI0REKhgZYq3NYjh8HtWJPj5w

For the full range of the data going back to 1854 the correlation coefficient is 0.925 and for the daily portion shown in the graph the correlation coefficient is 0.943.

Javier, I listened and I think things have vastly improved. I did some other things too. Thank you.

Reply to  Javier
November 12, 2017 1:21 pm

Charles,

I read your comment at Clive Best’s site and checked your graphs at your open drive. I don’t remember how I helped you, but I am glad I was of use to your work. I do remember seeing your work in the past and I am very much impressed how well it has behaved through the 2015-16 El Niño. I have downloaded some of your graphs and I am looking forward to see its future behavior.

Just so the rest of the people know what we are talking about, here are a couple of them:

The Niño 3.4 cyclical model with its prediction:
comment image

The HadCRUT4 cyclical model with its prediction:
comment image

According to it, 2018 should see temperatures similar to 2012. Looking forward to it.

Charles May
Reply to  Javier
November 12, 2017 4:17 pm

Javier

Thanks for posting the two graphs that you did. Just in those two graphs you posted there are things worth observing when looking at both of them.

In the Hadcrut 4 graph it is worth making note of the two modest humps in 2017. I think that comes from the clear hump seen earlier in the year in the Nino region graph.

The Nino region is going to bottom out early into 2018. At the same time, the Hadcrut 4 bottoms out a bit later. Then early in 2019 the Nino region reveals a hump. The Hadcrut 4 data does the same just a bit later.

I did not post it but I also look at the satellite records. In general, projections based upon such limited data are worthless but when I analyzed ;the global RSS data it sort of resembled the Hadcrut 4 data. It had a hump in 2017. It bottomed out in 2018. Further, it had another hump in 2019 but the height of the hump was excessive. In fact, the appearance of the 2017 hump was falsely indicated in the measurements. that has not happened yet but it is looking for it.

I know some were having a hissy fit over the October UAH value. Wait another month; it may be resolved.

Editor
Reply to  Ashok Patel
November 12, 2017 5:31 am

How can they say that? Because they’re climate.gov, which I think is a blog. Certainly not a government agency. I think they’re referring to the most recent ONI which may not have been published yet. I think I saw a reference to a week ending 11/11 data point.

See my comments above.

Note that the text of the article refers to “La Nina conditions,” only the title claims “La Nina is back.”

Reply to  Ric Werme
November 12, 2017 7:15 am

ONI Index is updated every month. The last available ONI Index is ASO 2017 at -0.4 published for end of October 2017. ONI is calculated every month end and at -0.4 even a “La Nina conditions” does not exist.

ren
Reply to  Ashok Patel
November 12, 2017 9:18 am

It is interesting to shift the stratospheric polar vortex towards Europe.
North America is exposed to the Arctic air.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/stratosphere/strat_a_f/gif_files/gfs_o3mr_05_nh_f00.png

John F. Hultquist
November 11, 2017 10:29 pm

Regarding the coming season: “ For now we see through a glass, darkly; …
Well, that’s me, anyway.

I can tell you what has happened.
Some passes over the Cascade Mountains in Washington State have been closed by the WADOT — something about early and too much snow. Early? Yes. Record early? No.
Parts of Seattle did have the 2nd earliest snow since Old Shep’s great great great Grandma was a pup. That’s 1892 in Shep years.

Reply to  John F. Hultquist
November 11, 2017 10:43 pm

The Warmists are in full screaming denial now…they will studiously ignore every indicator that says their predictions have failed to materialise but hey….after thirty years of this BS…it’s like music to my ears!

November 11, 2017 11:02 pm

November 11, 2017 at 9:27 pm
“tony, ensos are natural variations. over a long enough time period they average to near zero. that’s why scientists look at 30+ year trends for the AGW signal.”

Why then, do ‘climate scientists’ rant about the hottest year/month/decade/hour/second EVAH!

You can not have it both ways, its either annual records and the like, or climate, not both…

DWR54
Reply to  Steve Richards
November 12, 2017 1:45 am

I think the reference was to the fact that whilst global temperatures do respond to ENSO variations they differ in that over time temperatures show a warming trend, whereas ENSO does not, being an oscillation.

The chart below plots ENSO temperatures published by NOAA since 1982 against UAH global TLT anomalies over the same period. There’s a strong, if lagged, response from UAH to ENSO fluctuations, but UAH contains a warming trend which ENSO lacks.

http://oi65.tinypic.com/5peykk.jpg

bitchilly
Reply to  DWR54
November 12, 2017 1:49 pm

dwr ,that is a good chart to show the effect of a several warmer peaks in the region in the early part of the time series vs less in the later part. note the lower peaks in the period of the pause .

Allan M R MacRae
Reply to  DWR54
November 16, 2017 8:15 am

“There’s a strong, if lagged, response from UAH to ENSO fluctuations, but UAH contains a warming trend which ENSO lacks.”
I’ve noted this several times: the apparent warming is a recovery from the cooling impact of 2 major volcanoes – El Chichon 1982 and Pinatubo 1991+. Some “real” warming probably occurred after the Great Pacific Climate Shift circa 1977.

DWR54
Reply to  Steve Richards
November 12, 2017 11:28 am

Sara

The problem is that the ice melt is mostly from the base of the glaciers. Very little from the top. So whatever falls on the top, be it snow or, sadly, human beings, is not going to melt out for a long time. It just gets entrained into the ‘top-growth – base-melt’ system of glacial ice flows.

Coeur de Lion
November 12, 2017 12:36 am

Ectually, looking at earthnullschool. Net Greenland is minus 37

November 12, 2017 1:15 am

If we get a compensating la nina, will it be as long, and as large.

Bill Illis
November 12, 2017 4:52 am

It is going to be fairly weak, anything in the +/- 1.0C range has minimal impacts.

This is the best predictor of where the ENSO is going to go. It is good for 2 months out and one can be a little brave and predict the red line out a few more months if you understand the drivers. I think it will starting heading back toward neutral after the Nino 3.4 gets to the -1.0C value around December.
comment image

Data here:

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/indices/sstoi.indices

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/data/indices/wksst8110.for

http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ocean/index/heat_content_index.txt

Editor
Reply to  Bill Illis
November 12, 2017 5:37 am

It is going to be fairly weak, anything in the +/- 1.0C range has minimal impacts.

A weak/moderate La Nina brings more “excessively interesting” weather to New England than a strong one. I won’t dismiss it out-of-hand.

Very warm Octobers often lead to stormy winters for us. Joe Bastardi is almost beside himself, but yeah, it doesn’t take much to set him off. 🙂

Hans-Georg
November 12, 2017 5:19 am

If you look at the temperature anomalies off the coast of South America at today’s tropical tidbits, it’s like shivering:comment image

I’ve rarely seen such a large-scale temperature anomaly in the La Nina nursery. Although Tropical tidbits should be a little too dynamic, this is a sign that the change is large-scale. The bigger patterns for EL Nino / La Nina have changed drastically.

Hans-Georg
Reply to  Hans-Georg
November 12, 2017 5:28 am

NOAA shows the same pattern:
comment image

AZ1971
Reply to  Hans-Georg
November 12, 2017 3:04 pm

Can anyone explain to me why the anomaly off the NE coast of the U.S. has been so persistently high for years now? Seems to me that it would be a function of the directional change in the Gulf Stream as it heads towards Europe, but why would it dump so much of its latent heat content there? Does it have anything to do with the continental shelf?

ren
Reply to  Hans-Georg
November 12, 2017 8:56 am

Region 1 + 2 is small, but very important. It shows the temperature of the Peruvian Current, which supplies water from the Antarctic to the equator. Observation of this region allows to predict the development of La Niña.comment image

Sara
November 12, 2017 6:03 am

Crackers aside, does the repeat of a La Nina from last winter mean we’ll have the same winter weather as last winter? It should, if Ma Nature follows her own rules. Well, she always does, and we get the results.

in my kingdom, it should mean a cold, nasty December, with average snow and then – for no reason known to Man or Mann – reverse the cold/snow/bleah and go with a damp, gray, chilly winter kind of like what used to happen in England. Well, that’s fine with me. I don’t mind a hike to the bank (1.75 mile one way) or a quick trip to the bus stop to get to the grocery store, but I detest having to dress like a lumberjack all the time, just because it’s winter and I’m outside shoveling and grumbling.

As long as the birds know where to find my feeding station, it’s fine.I have some great stuff from winters past: red-bellied female woodpecker and blue jays coming for the peanuts I put out for them, squirrels galore (red, black, and gray) with that guilt-ridden startled look, and bazillions of sparrows, including some rare for my area. I’ll stock up on bird food, and make the little feather flockers happy.

Hans-Georg
Reply to  Sara
November 12, 2017 7:06 am

Last winter’s “La Nina” can not be compared with the upcoming one, as it will be stronger. The “La Nina” last winter was indeed only by a change in the scale by NOAA a “La Nina”. I would describe the condition as neutral in winter 2016/17. So the effects on the weather in regions influenced by ENSO are different in 2016/2017 and 2017/2018.

Sara
Reply to  Sara
November 12, 2017 9:38 am

Thanks. I’m also looking at the water vapor (GOES images) and which direction the wind is blowing, and it’s starting to blow southeast across the North Pole from Siberia. I stocked the pantry pretty well this time, but I’ll add even more next time.

ren
Reply to  Sara
November 12, 2017 11:22 pm

Thank you see what happens.

November 12, 2017 8:04 am

Wait, WHAT?

So my stock in the Peruvian fishing industry is going to go up? Cool. More money for me! HA! Take that suckers! *tongue in cheek*

Where is the ocean circulation in this paper? DID I MISS IT??? Oh wait, it was ignored AGAIN…so freaking typical.

When are these people going to realize that the OCEAN is IMPORTANT TOO??!!!

John F. Hultquist
November 12, 2017 8:57 am

Jenn Runion November 12, 2017 at 8:04 am writes: “… in this paper. …

Jenn,
Maybe you missed it but the post starts with this information:

Author:  Emily Becker

Emily writes a monthly post at NOAA Climate dot Gov and the name (highlighted) is a link to those postings.
You should not “freak out” until you have read about a year’s worth and begin to understand what this is and what it is not.
There are data and maps at the .gov site and these posts — Emily says “Be sure to check out Mike’s** recent post ” — are meant to monthly help “promote public understanding.” They are not meant to provide a full blown report of everything regarding our dynamic Earth.

**Author:  Mike Halpert . . . . 3rd line up at the end of Emily’s post.

Pamela Gray
November 12, 2017 9:11 am

I bought 3 cords of wood this year. And am praying it will be enough. Just sayin.

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  Pamela Gray
November 12, 2017 9:17 am

Pamela,
If you run short, get in touch. In my pasture, there are 35,000 pounds of wildfire killed Ponderosa still needing cut into rounds, and split. Likely you can find some a bit closer to you though.
Stay warm.

John F. Hultquist
November 12, 2017 9:12 am

Blew through that last HTML tag. Good morning World. I’ll go feed the animals and come back awake.

The 12 November 2017 Sun 1500 UTC Composite Water Vapor Satellite Imagery for full Earth is an amazing sight.

North America here: http://www.weather.gov/satellite?image=wv#wv

November 12, 2017 9:53 am

While the planet is in a ~ 350 year warming trend with no end in sight, for the past 21 months the planet has been cooling, since the big El Niño of 2014-16 ended. This is to be expected, and in fact the cooling has been slower and lesser than after prior big Niños. The interest in declaring a La Niña is because the cooling might continue for one or more years and there is a need to explain it within the global warming narrative.

The same as skeptics argued that the warming was due to El Niño, believers are going to argue that the cooling is due to La Niña. Both positions are thus resistant to any change in temperatures that might be observed. In my opinion we will have to wait until around 2020 to see how global average surface temperatures emerge from these ENSO episodes and the general trend can be better assessed. If by any chance a strong volcanic eruption takes place, any possibility that a decrease in temperatures might reinforce the skeptic position will disappear.

Luckily for Bali residents, and also for skeptics, Mount Agung has been decreasing its seismic activity and so the danger of a volcanic eruption there appears to decrease.
comment image

Earthling2
Reply to  Javier
November 12, 2017 10:56 am

I agree Javier, it would be bad to have some natural external cooling event like a volcano be given the credit for any cooling. Even if a volcanic event happened well into an established La Nina the alarmist narrative would likely dismiss the cooling as all natural. Especially not ever a really big volcano that causes such extreme cooling that we have a ‘year without a summer’ like in 1816 after Tambora erupted a year earlier. Let’s hope that any chaos happens in a super El Nino period and the damages are minimal.

afonzarelli
Reply to  Javier
November 12, 2017 6:01 pm

Regardless of what rational they use, with a la nina and the return of the pause the models will have been deemed a complete failure by those who created them. There is zero chance of a twenty year pause in warming in the models and only a 2% chance of a fifteen year hiatus. By then we shall all be singing, along with the ipcc itself, “ding dong the witch is dead”…

Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 5:44 am

Afonzarelli, your confidence is moving, but if the hypothesis can explain the 1950-75 cooling, it can explain anything, I’m afraid. Even a glaciation return would be triggered by global warming.

afonzarelli
Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 6:48 am

Javier, the “crux” of the matter at this point is warming. Not only from the scientific view point (the 2C of warming), but the PR view point as well. It would be a mighty stretch to think that a theory that sold us on warming would then do an about face and sell us on cooling. At that point, if we do see cooling, large swaths of the scientific and political establishment will most certainly jump ship. (kind of like Dr. Curry, only on steroids) As well, AGW will be widely regarded as the most massive false paradigm in history since the days of the flat earth…

crackers345
Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 9:45 pm

afonz – co2 is a
greenhouse gas.
this has always been
so and will always be so.
it will never be disproven,
any more than heat seeking
missiles will
suddenly be attracted
to icebergs and not
airplanes.
’cause physics.

crackers345
Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 9:47 pm

javier – “Afonzarelli, your confidence is moving, but if the hypothesis can explain the 1950-75 cooling,”

no one cites ghgs for that very
small amount of cooling.
it was most likely
aerosols after post-ww2
industrialization and
autos and before the
era of clean air
regs. even maybe
some nuclear
testing.

Gabro
Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 9:49 pm

crackers345 November 13, 2017 at 9:47 pm

Wrong again!

The post WWII cooling was far more dramatic than the slight warming from the PDO flip of 1977 until now.

Gabro
Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 9:50 pm

And the post WWI, pre-WWII warming was indistinguishable from the late 20th century warming.

Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 4:01 am

Instead MtAgung will then likly blow around 2020 at the bottom of the solar cycle as most volcanoes blow during solar maximums or solar minimums–that will be even worse than blowing now since it will cool for a few years and in 2024 is a malankovitch cycle while the northern hemisphere is in winter.. that will be some serious cooling on top of the volcanoes.. also David Dilley globalweathercycles: cold arctic pulses hit around 2020! no way will there be anything other than colder than shit throught the 2020’s.

Reply to  Sam Khoury
November 13, 2017 5:42 am

most volcanoes blow during solar maximums or solar minimums

Or in between.

Reply to  Sam Khoury
November 13, 2017 3:13 pm

Mt St Helens and Pinatabo are exactly 11 years apart at the top of solar cycles, in around 2010 at the previous bottom were more volcano’s including a 5 VEI5 level. That’s why I predict that more will blow around 2020..

Editor
November 12, 2017 9:56 am

I griped at https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/enso/november-2017-la-ni%C3%B1a-update-she%E2%80%99s-back about the La Nina claim. They included it and replied:

“La Nina conditions” does not mean we’re in a “La Nina.”
Submitted by Ric Werme on Fri, 2017-11-10 16:57

The declaration of a La Nina is made after five months of three month periods of La Nina conditions. Just because (is this your source?) http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/ensodisc.shtml says “The weekly Niño indices were variable during the month, with values near -0.5° C during the past week in the Niño-3.4 and Niño-3 regions” does not warrant using a title “La Niña update: She’s back!”

Check out Google News – there are many headlines claiming we are in a La Nina. We aren’t. I don’t know how many trace their headline back to yours, but it would be nice if you can try to stop it. I’ll try to help on another climate blog.

https://news.google.com/news/story/dVzWP-trFGJEamMgxFvpRhLTnW6iM?ned=us&gl=US&hl=en may show what I mean at Google news.

RE: “La Nina conditions” does not mean we’re in a “La Nina.”
Submitted by Nathaniel.Johnson on Fri, 2017-11-10 22:59

Hi Ric,

I understand your point. According to NOAA’s criteria for defining an El Nino or La Nina event, we will not be certain whether or not an ENSO event officially occurred until at least 5 overlapping seasons with ENSO conditions have passed. However, NOAA issues a La Nina Advisory when recent conditions satisfy La Nina conditions, and the expectation is that these conditions will persist long enough to satisfy the duration requirement. This is what happened a few days ago – an official La Nina Advisory was posted. So technically, I suppose the message is that “La Nina conditions are here and expected to continue.” From a practical perspective for the purpose of preparing the general public and users of climate prediction information, I am not sure if that message would be much different from “La Nina is back.” So while I appreciate your point, I am hopeful that the main message is being reached by those who are most impacted by the La Nina Advisory.

Sara
November 12, 2017 10:00 am

I know this is somewhat off topic, although it was mentioned above by someone else (Crackers, in fact).

In regard to Greenland’s ice sheet depths, Fox News reports that Fallen American Veterans Foundation is attempting to recover the remains of US servicemen who went missing in Greenland during World War II, in 1942 when the amphibious biplane that carried them crashed. The problem with recovery is that they may be buried under 350 feet of Greenland’s ice and snow.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/11/08/leave-no-man-behind-expert-team-prepares-to-retrieve-remains-fallen-wwll-servicemen-from-up-to-350-feet-below-ice.html

Now, since that World War II date (1942) is 75 years ago, and the ice depth is expected to be as much as 350 feet, what is with this notion that the entire ice sheet may melt any time soon? Wouldn’t that have already happened by now? That’s an average annual added load of 4.66 feet of snow (about 1.414 meters), which becomes ice when compressed.

I’m as serious as cancer when I ask if reality EVER sinks in with any of those people?

Reply to  Sara
November 12, 2017 1:36 pm

Seriously Sara, then you should understand that ice forms continuously on top of the Greenland ice sheet, and then slowly moves sideways until reaching the coast where it becomes icebergs or melts at the sea. So while things on top the ice sheet sink in the ice, the ice sheet is becoming a little smaller most years because iceberg losses are bigger than surface mass gains.
comment image

https://www.dmi.dk/en/groenland/maalinger/greenland-ice-sheet-surface-mass-budget/

Sara
Reply to  Sara
November 12, 2017 1:56 pm

Ja, okay, javier, did you understand that the number 350 in the article refers to the depth of ice under which those remains may be buried? Seriously? And have you taken the 75 years between the 1942 crash and now into account, in your gains/losses phrase? Or that with ice sheet movement, the crash site may not even be where the plane was guesstimated to have crashed?

You do know, don’t you, that at some point far back in planet Earth’s history, Greenland was not only ice-free, but temperate and green with forests? Those have been found by paleontologists, just a few years ago.

I’m not sure what your point is, but that’s a nice drawing. However, Greenland is flatter than that.

Earthling2
Reply to  Sara
November 13, 2017 1:04 pm

Sara, from what I have read regarding the WW2 airplanes in the Greenland Ice, is that a large part of the 350 feet in the ice now is that airplanes rapidly sank through the top layers of snow before it became ice, and somewhat even lower into the ice layers itself, through heat conduction of the airplane itself. Only some of it, perhaps less than 20%-25% of the ice covering the planes now came from new snowfall in the last 46 years when they discovered the airplanes. I hope you don’t think that somehow 350 feet of new ice formed over them in 46 years from snowfall? That just don’t add up.

ren
November 12, 2017 11:11 am

Let’s compare the strength of the polar vortex in 2015 (high magnetic activity of the Sun) and in 2017 in October and November. You can see that this year the polar vortex is weak.
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/stratosphere/strat-trop/gif_files/time_pres_UGRD_MEAN_ALL_NH_2015.png
http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/stratosphere/strat-trop/gif_files/time_pres_UGRD_MEAN_ALL_NH_2017.png

pbweather
Reply to  ren
November 13, 2017 8:19 am

The bottom polar vortex graphic is faulty and not comparable.

ren
Reply to  pbweather
November 13, 2017 2:27 pm

It is already correct.

November 12, 2017 12:58 pm

The 2016 el Nino was a Modoki.
This La Nina is also a Modoki.
ie different.

Robert W Turner
November 12, 2017 1:02 pm

For those harping on the 3-month NOAA definition for defining official ENSO conditions should know that the definition is entirely arbitrary. You don’t wait until the third day of having the flu to declare that you’re sick, you base that diagnosis on the current conditions. Right now we unequivocally have La NIna conditions, whether it will be strong enough to be declared “official” remains to be seen, but NOAA’s official declarations mean little to nature.

It’s also important to remember that it’s based on an anomaly, an anomaly compared to a baseline defined from revisioned-adjusted-molested data.

Editor
Reply to  Robert W Turner
November 12, 2017 5:14 pm

Economists do wait a similar amount of time before declaring we’re in a recession.

I wouldn’t say “Right now we unequivocally have La NIna conditions,” the Australian BoM hasn’t reported it (they might tomorrow), and I’ve only read word-of-mouth reports from climate.gov which didn’t report their source!

afonzarelli
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 12, 2017 10:00 pm

(Ric, economists have their heads up their you know whutts… ☺)

pbweather
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 13, 2017 7:28 am

Ric,

I am a meteorologist and have been using ENSO as a forecasting tool for many years. We are in a La Nina and what ever criteria you want to look at, it is in La Nina mode and has been since last NH spring. The fact that the rather restrictive and lagged NOAA criteria for the Nino 3.4 region has not sustained official Nina SST level criteria is irrelevant if the atmosphere is merrily behaving as though a La Nina is occurring…which is most certainly is.

Remember it has only been relatively recent that observers have started naming different versions of El Nino
(e.g. Modoki). So why should La Nina’s be any different?

crackers345
Reply to  Ric Werme
November 13, 2017 9:59 pm

afonzarelli
“(Ric, economists have their heads up their you know whutts… ☺)”

my bet – you have never
published a single paper in
econ, never will, and cannot
meaningful critique any research
from a prof economist

am i wrong?

you’re a legend in your
own mind.

Allan M R MacRae
November 12, 2017 1:14 pm

From: John Christy
Date: November 4, 2017 at 7:28:22 PM GMT+7
To: Allan MacRae
Cc: Anthony Watts, Roy Spencer, John Christy, Joe D’Aleo, Joe Bastardi
Subject: Re: Sorted – atmospheric cooling will resume soon

Allan

Yes. We’ve seen this correlation since our first paper about it in Nature back in 1994. The Pacific gave up a lot of heat between July and October – and some of it is making its way through the atmosphere. We think the anomalies will drop soon too.

John C.

Sent from my iPhone

On Nov 4, 2017, at 6:03 AM, Allan MacRae wrote:

FYI friends.

I was curious why the UAH LT was diverging above its predicted value based on the East Equatorial Upper Ocean Temperature Anomaly – I re-plotted the data vs UAH LT Tropics (instead of UAH LT Global) and the situation became more clear- atmospheric cooling will resume soon, imo.

Best, Allan

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/11/02/while-global-surface-temperature-cools-the-lower-troposphere-has-record-warmest-october/comment-page-1/#comment-2654147

Sorted – atmospheric cooling will resume soon. See the plot below of the UAH LT TROPICAL Anomaly vs the East Equatorial Upper Ocean Temperature Anomaly and the situation becomes more clear.

This is a typical pattern after major El Nino’s, in which atmospheric (LT) temperature diverges above the level predicted by the long term relationship with the East Equatorial Upper Ocean Temperature Anomaly. The pattern will converge again soon, and atmospheric cooling will resume. WHY this happens after major El Nino’s is still to be explained. Perhaps the El Nino heat in the atmosphere just needs time to dissipate.

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=1483830358361188&set=a.1012901982120697.1073741826.100002027142240&type=3&theater

Allan M R MacRae
Reply to  Allan M R MacRae
November 12, 2017 1:32 pm

My further analysis suggests the UAH LT temperature anomaly will cool to about 0.0C within about 6 months.

AndyG55
Reply to  Allan M R MacRae
November 12, 2017 1:51 pm

WOW, Allan, you reckon that far, that quickly.

That’ll make things interesting, especially if it continues to drop after that.

I was thinking we would probably see the 2019 yearly anomaly being around zero

Won’t that make a mess of the models! lol !!!
comment image

Allan M R MacRae
Reply to  Allan M R MacRae
November 12, 2017 3:50 pm

Hi Andy

The above plot has a six-month offset between the UAH LT Tropical Anomaly vs the East Equatorial Upper Ocean Temperature Anomaly. It is a close relationship most of the time. After 6 months I have no prediction.

Best, Allan

Allan M R MacRae
Reply to  Allan M R MacRae
November 12, 2017 4:04 pm

Correction:
I have no prediction based on the above correlation.
I published in 2002 that global cooling would resume by ~2020-2030, based on low solar activity. This would be similar or cooler than the global cooling that occurred from ~1940-1975.
I am now leaning towards cooling starting circa ~2020 or earlier. Hope to be wrong.
Regards, Allan

Reply to  Allan M R MacRae
November 16, 2017 11:35 am

Minor nit:
Plot shd read “leads UAH LT TROPICS by 5 months ( not 6)

November 12, 2017 1:31 pm

This La Nina will grow slowly, but will attain a remarkable extent and intensity of cold at its end in a year or two’s time.

Ian Cooper
November 12, 2017 2:04 pm

It may not actually be “officially” La Nina, but here in New Zealand we can testify that ‘La Nina conditions’ are already in play! After 16 months of below average sunshine hours and above average rainfall throughout the country, we now see anti-cyclones crossing the Tasman Sea at our latitude or lower! The tap has been turned off, the sun is shining at long last. unlike other parts of the globe, the Girl Child is welcome in our house because that is what she brings. Yes there will be the threat of drought this austral summer, but after the ‘non summer’ of last year we will put up with that possibility just to enjoy a ‘real summer!’

Our sunniest, and warmest summers come from La Nina. According to the best weather predictors in the land, MetVUW (Victoria University Wellington) we are in for a prolonged period of anti-cyclones crossing our country. Classic signs of La Nina.
https://www.metvuw.com/forecast/forecast.php?type=rain&region=swp&noofdays=10

The debate here reminds me of the similar situation that arises with the onset of a drought. The drought isn’t declared until certain criteria have occurred. In the mean time drought conditions have already been occurring. I could make the call right now that a drought is under way in my area, and it may well come to pass, but that would be too presumptive of me at this early stage, even though droughts here are common with La Nina at this time of the year.

1sky1
November 12, 2017 4:27 pm

The Nino3.4 index little variance at time-scales longer than a decade. El Ninos and La Ninas will come and go, but the critical question is the truly secular, much longer-lived changes in surface temperatures. We’re looking mostly at the trees in the forest here.

afonzarelli
Reply to  1sky1
November 12, 2017 10:19 pm

El Ninos and La Ninas will come and go…

But surface temps remain the same. That is your forest (for the trees). Climate models do not allow for pauses in warming of over fifteen years regardless of the cause. If we do see pauses like this, then models have a poor understanding of natural variability and thus should be scrapped…

1sky1
Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 1:06 pm

But surface temps remain the same.

Indeed, that’s been the case in tropical Pacific waters. The Nino3.4 index is virtually trendless throughout its entire history.

crackers345
Reply to  afonzarelli
November 13, 2017 9:56 pm

afonzarelli commented-
“But surface temps remain the same.”

hardly

“Climate models do not allow for pauses in warming of over fifteen years regardless of the cause.”

wrong. ENSOs can cause +/- 0.2-0.3 of warming/cooling. That’s 1.5-2 decades of agw warming.

“If we do see pauses like this, then models have a poor understanding of natural variability and thus should be scrapped…”

climate models will never be
“scrapped,” because they are the
only game in town, just as
maxwell’s equations are the only
game in town for electromagnetic
phenomena. climate models are’
merely sets of equations that solve
a very difficult problem and are
solved numerically. do you have any
other way of solving physics
problems????????

no, you don’t

Reply to  1sky1
November 13, 2017 5:50 am

El Ninos and La Ninas will come and go

Actually “Los Niños” and “Las Niñas.” The plural affects also the article. Just adding a -s at the end is not enough.

1sky1
Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 1:12 pm

Since these episodes, unlike children, come strictly one at a time, pedantically invoking Spanish grammar in English usage seems out of place.

Reply to  1sky1
November 13, 2017 1:35 pm

Things are either correct or incorrect. You either use “El Niño” and “La Niña,” or you use “Los Niños” and “Las Niñas.” Saying “El Niños” is incorrect, whichever way you look at it.

If Spanish grammar is too difficult for you, you can always resort to say “El Niño” events to indicate more than one.

1sky1
Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 2:10 pm

In English usage, we have “mea culpas,” not “mea culpae.” Pedants who find such accepted usage too difficult won’t get either from me.

Reply to  1sky1
November 13, 2017 3:18 pm

Those who insist in making a mistake never learn.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 6:58 pm

The English Language is whatever the common man says it is. Beyond a few of the highly educated perfectionists, nobody cares about the grammar of a dead language: Latin. I know a smattering of Latin grammatical rules, but that is only because I like to read and I’m eclectic in my tastes.

I do know many of the grammatical rules of Spanish. And I still use El Ninos. People understand it, and probably don’t know nor care what ‘Los’ means.

Dave Fair
Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 7:03 pm

Oh, Javier, just realized that ‘El Nino’ is a thing. Therefore one would say ‘Los El Ninos.’

Gabro
Reply to  Javier
November 13, 2017 3:33 pm

Javier,

IMO, since we can speak of “an El Niño”, it’s OK to refer to a number of these events as “El Niños”.

The two-word term has become an English phrase referring to a recurrent weather event.

I’ve been speaking Spanish for 52 years now and my wife is a native Spanish-speaking South American.

ren
November 13, 2017 6:07 am

Above the Kamchatka there is an area of elevated temperature which blocks the circulation in the stratospheric polar vortex.
http://pics.tinypic.pl/i/00946/tzxqtqlcgc5o.png

Edwin
November 13, 2017 1:03 pm

Can anyone direct me to a paper or website that explains what if any interactions there is between ENSO and Pacific Decadal Oscillation and Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation. It looks like something else is at play besides ENSO when you look at past winters on the NOAA seasonal forecast.

Editor
Reply to  Edwin
November 15, 2017 5:22 pm

I don’t know of a good resource, online or in print. It would be a good topic for a book.

Joe D’Aleo is one of the most knowledgeable people on the subject and his name makes a good search term. If you hear him talk, you will be lost in minutes. I used to be lost within 1 minute. 🙂

A couple links you can peruse. (I included NAO (North Atlantic Oscillation) because that has a big influence on New England winters, and sometimes midwest.) All the combinations quickly get out of control.

http://myweb.wwu.edu/dbunny/pdfs/aleo-easterbrook_ch5Relationship-multidecadal-global-temps-to-oceanic-oscillations.pdf

http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00521.1