Climate Outlook
ASIA January - June 2002
Issued: December 2001
The IRI has prepared this experimental Climate Outlook for Asia for
January - June 2002.
Of relevance in the preparation of this outlook is the prediction of
near-average conditions in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific
through early March 2002, followed by slightly warmer than normal sea
surface temperatures (SSTs) from mid-March through June. Currently the SSTs
across much of the eastern and central equatorial are near their
long-term average,
(SSTs),
although slightly lower than average SSTs exist in
the eastern portion of the tropical Pacific basin and warmer than average
SSTs persist in the central and western parts of the basin. Thus, the
Nino 4 region remains slightly above normal, Nino 3.4 is near to very
slightly below normal, and Nino 3 and Nino 1+2 are slightly below normal.
Overall, this particular "flavor" of near neutral equatorial Pacific SST
conditions is expected to persist for the first two overlapping seasons
of the forecast,
January-March 2002,
February-April 2002,
while during the later two seasons,
March-May 2002,
April-June 2002,
they are expected to
become slightly above average even in the eastern tropical Pacific,
suggesting the possibility of a developing mild warm ENSO state. The
slightly warmer than average SSTs that continue in parts of the Indian
Ocean are expected to decrease slowly toward normal through the forecast
period. The area of above-average temperature in the tropical and
subtropical north Atlantic Ocean, and the weaker pattern of slightly
warm and slightly cold SST in parts of the equatorial and tropical
south Atlantic, are expected to continue weakly, although uncertainty
is quite high for the portion near and south of the equator.
METHODS -
This Outlook was prepared using the following procedures and
information:
A) Coupled ocean-atmosphere model predictions of tropical Pacific SST
covering the forecast period. Particularly heavy weighting has been
given to predictions from the coupled model operated by the NOAA
National Centers for Environmental Prediction, Climate Modeling Branch.
This model suggests a continuation of near-average conditions during the
first forecast season. The forecast for near-neutral conditions is
consistent with some, but not all, numerical and statistical forecasts
of central and eastern Pacific SSTs.
B) Forecasts of the tropical Indian ocean using a statistical model
developed by the IRI.
C) Global atmospheric general circulation model (GCM) predictions of the
atmospheric response to the present and predicted sea-surface
temperature patterns.
D) Other sources of information include
NASA's
Seasonal to Interannual Prediction Project (GSFC-NASA)
and also seasonal prediction research at COLA.
The procedures, models, and data used to derive this Climate Outlook may
be somewhat different from those used by the national meteorological
services in the region. Thus, this product may differ from the official
forecasts issued in those areas. The Climate Outlook for
January - June 2002
is dependent on the accuracy of the SST predictions. For the
tropical Pacific, these predictions can be expected to provide useful
information, but there is some uncertainty concerning the evolution of
SSTs. Spread in global SST predictions is a source of uncertainty in the
Outlook provided here. Note that even if perfectly accurate SST
forecasts were possible, there would still be uncertainty in the climate
forecast due to chaotic internal variability of the atmosphere. These
uncertainties are reflected in the probabilities given in the forecast.
It is stressed that the current status of seasonal-to-interannual
climate forecasting allows prediction of spatial and temporal averages,
and does not fully account for all factors that influence regional and
national climate variability. This Outlook is relevant only to seasonal
time scales and relatively large areas; local variations should be
expected, and variations within the 3-month season should also be
expected. For further information concerning this and other guidance
products, users are strongly advised to contact their National
Meteorological Services.
OUTLOOK -
This Outlook covers four seasons: January-March 2002,
February-April 2002, March-May 2002 and April-June 2002.
Maps are given showing tercile probabilities of
precipitation and temperature. The maps for precipitation indicate the
probabilities that the seasonal precipitation will fall into the wettest
third of the years (top number), the middle third of the years (middle
number), or the driest third of the years (bottom number). The color
shading indicates the probability of the most dominant tercile -- that
is, the tercile having the highest forecast probability. The color bar
alongside the map defines these dominant tercile probability levels. The
upper side of the color bar shows the colors used for increasingly
strong probabilities when the dominant tercile is the above-normal
tercile, while the lower side shows likewise for the below-normal
tercile. The gray color indicates an enhanced probability for the
near-normal tercile (nearly always limited to 40%). As before, numbers
and their associated histograms show the probabilities of the three
terciles. In areas with lots of spatial detail, there may not be
sufficient room on the map, to allow histograms for each region. In
those cases, some idea of the probabilities may be gained from the color
alone. A qualitative outlook of climatology ("C") indicates that there
is no basis for favoring any particular category. Areas that are marked
by "D" represent regions experiencing their dry season (less than 15% of
annual precipitation) and for which less than 5cm of precipitation
typically occurs over the season. Otherwise, for example, in the case of
most of southern Japan in January-March 2002
(Map A),
there is a 25% probability
that the precipitation will be in the wettest third of the years, a 35%
chance it will be in the near-normal third of the years, and a 40%
chance that the precipitation will be in the driest third of the years.
Maps of temperature show expected probabilities that the seasonal
temperatures will fall into the warmest third of the years, the middle
third of the years, or the coldest third of the years
(Map A).
The numbers for each region on the temperature maps
indicate the probabilities of temperatures to fall in each of the three
categories, above-, near-, and below-normal.
An
additional precipitation map
is provided for the first season indicating probabilities for extreme
precipitation anomalies. Extremes are defined as anomalies that fall
within the top and bottom 15th percentile of the observed records. A
priori, there is a 15% probability of being within the extremely wet
category, and a 15% probability of being within the extremely dry
category, leaving a 70% probability that the precipitation will not be
extreme. The maps indicate areas of increased risk of extreme
precipitation totals. Three levels of increased risk are defined:
slightly enhanced risk, enhanced risk, and greatly enhanced risk. For
slightly enhanced risk, there is a 25-40% probability that precipitation
will be within the indicated extreme, i.e. wet or dry. This represents
an approximate doubling of the climatological risk. For enhanced risk,
there is a 40-50% probability that precipitation will be within the
indicated extreme. This represents an approximate tripling of the
climatological risk. For greatly enhanced risk, the probability that
precipitation will be within the indicated extreme exceeds 50%, i.e. the
indicated extreme is the most likely outcome. A similar map is provided
in the first season indicating probabilities of
extreme temperature
anomalies.
Boundaries between sub-regions should be considered as transition zones,
and their location considered to be only qualitatively correct.
January-March 2002 through April-June 2002:
Precipitation
For all four forecast periods (Jan-Feb-Mar, Feb-Mar-Apr, Mar-Apr-May
and Apr-May-Jun), slightly or more stronglyh enhanced probabilities
for below normal precipitation are forecast for parts of the southern
and/or eastern coasts of Asia, such as Myranmar, Malaysia, Vietnam,
southeastern China, Taiwan, and Japan. Probabilities for dryness are
most enhanced in the Jan-Feb-Mar forecast. By contrast, enhanced
probabilities for above normal precipitation are forecast farther to
the southeast, where above normal SST is expected to continue. This
includes much of the Phillipines, northern Indonesia and most of
the western tropical Pacific islands such as Palau, Yap, Guam and
others.
Temperature
Some level of enhancement of the probabilities for above normal
temperature are forecast for all of the four forecast periods
in significant portions of Asia, becoming gradually weaker for the
later forecast periods. Probabilities for above normal temperature
are strongest and/or most consistent across the four forecast periods
in northern Indonesia, western Russia, and parts of India and parts of
southeast Asia.
OBSERVED CLIMATOLOGY DATA for Jan-Feb-Mar,
Feb-Mar-Apr, Mar-Apr-May and Apr-May-Jun
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