IRI ENSO Forecast
IRI Technical ENSO Update
Published: September 19, 2018
Note: The SST anomalies cited below refer to the OISSTv2 SST data set, and not ERSSTv4. OISSTv2 is often used for real-time analysis and model initialization, while ERSSTv4 is used for retrospective official ENSO diagnosis because it is more homogeneous over time, allowing for more accurate comparisons among ENSO events that are years apart. During ENSO events, OISSTv2 often shows stronger anomalies than ERSSTv4, and during very strong events the two datasets may differ by as much as 0.5 C. Additionally, the ERSSTv4 may tend to be cooler than OISSTv2, because ERSSTv4 is expressed relative to a base period that is updated every 5 years, while the base period of OISSTv2 is updated every 10 years and so, half of the time, is based on a slightly older period and does not account as much for the slow warming trend in the tropical Pacific SST.
Recent and Current Conditions
In mid-September 2018, the NINO3.4 SST anomaly showed neutral ENSO conditions. For August the SST anomaly was 0.30 C, indicating neutral conditions, and for Jun-Aug it was 0.27 C, also neutral. The IRI’s definition of El Niño, like NOAA/Climate Prediction Center’s, requires that the SST anomaly in the Nino3.4 region (5S-5N; 170W-120W) exceed 0.5 C. Similarly, for La Niña, the anomaly must be -0.5 C or less. The climatological probabilities for La Niña, neutral, and El Niño conditions vary seasonally, and are shown in a table at the bottom of this page for each 3-month season. The most recent weekly anomaly in the Nino3.4 region was 0.3, showing neutral conditions. Additionally, most of the key atmospheric variables, including the upper level zonal wind anomalies, the outgoing longwave radiation pattern (convection), and the Southern Oscillation Index suggest neutral conditions over recent weeks. However, during the most recent month the low-level zonal wind anomalies have become weakly westerly, suggesting a tendency toward El Niño conditions. The subsurface temperature anomalies across the eastern equatorial Pacific remain at moderately above-average, and have recently shown a slight further increase. These warmed waters at depth have been impacting the surface, resulting in slightly above-average temperatures, and also presaging likely further warming of the SST in the coming months. Given the current and recent SST anomalies, the subsurface profile and the conditions of most key atmospheric variables, we see a likely warming to at least weak El Niño conditions beginning in the Sep-Nov period.
Expected Conditions
What is the outlook for the ENSO status going forward? The most recent official diagnosis and outlook was issued approximately one week ago in the NOAA/Climate Prediction Center ENSO Diagnostic Discussion, produced jointly by CPC and IRI; it gave a 50-55% chance for El Niño development during fall season, rising to 65-70% for winter 2018-19. An El Niño watch remains active. The latest set of model ENSO predictions, from mid-September, now available in the IRI/CPC ENSO prediction plume, is discussed below.
As of mid-September, about 60-65% of the dynamical or statistical models predict El Niño conditions for the initial Sep-Nov 2018 season, with about 35-40% showing neutral conditions. Following that first forecast season, probabilities for neutral drop to roughly the 15-30% range for Oct-Dec 2018 through May-Jul 2019. Meanwhile, the probability for El Niño rises to 80-85% for Oct-Dec through Dec-Feb, but remains at more than 70% through to the final forecast season of May-Jul 2019. This hints at the possibility of a 2-year El Niño period, given the late start to the predicted 2018-19 El Niño. La Niña probabilities are near zero throughout the forecast period. At lead times of 3 or more months into the future, statistical and dynamical models that incorporate information about the ocean’s observed subsurface thermal structure generally exhibit higher predictive skill than those that do not. For the Dec-Feb 2018-19 season, among models that do use subsurface temperature information, 23% of models predicts neutral conditions and 77% predict El Niño conditions.
Note – Only models that produce a new ENSO prediction every month are included in the above statement.
Caution is advised in interpreting the distribution of model predictions as the actual probabilities. At longer leads, the skill of the models degrades, and skill uncertainty must be convolved with the uncertainties from initial conditions and differing model physics, leading to more climatological probabilities in the long-lead ENSO Outlook than might be suggested by the suite of models. Furthermore, the expected skill of one model versus another has not been established using uniform validation procedures, which may cause a difference in the true probability distribution from that taken verbatim from the raw model predictions.
An alternative way to assess the probabilities of the three possible ENSO conditions is more quantitatively precise and less vulnerable to sampling errors than the categorical tallying method used above. This alternative method uses the mean of the predictions of all models on the plume, equally weighted, and constructs a standard error function centered on that mean. The standard error is Gaussian in shape, and has its width determined by an estimate of overall expected model skill for the season of the year and the lead time. Higher skill results in a relatively narrower error distribution, while low skill results in an error distribution with width approaching that of the historical observed distribution. This method shows probabilities for La Niña at 2% or less for the full range of seasons from Sep-Nov 2018 through to May-Jul 2019. Probabilities for neutral conditions begin at 45% for Sep-Nov, fall to about 25-30% for Nov-Jan through Apr-Jun, and are 36% for May-Jul. Probabilities for El Niño, which begin at 55% for Sep-Nov, rise to about the 70-75% range from Nov-Jan through Apr-Jun and drop to 62% for May-Jul. A plot of the probabilities generated from this most recent IRI/CPC ENSO prediction plume using the multi-model mean and the Gaussian standard error method summarizes the model consensus out to about 10 months into the future. The same cautions mentioned above for the distributional count of model predictions apply to this Gaussian standard error method of inferring probabilities, due to differing model biases and skills. In particular, this approach considers only the mean of the predictions, and not the total range across the models, nor the ensemble range within individual models.
In summary, the probabilities derived from the models on the IRI/CPC plume describe, on average, a a tilt of the odds toward El Niño conditions starting from Sep-Nov and continuing through May-Jul 2019, peaking around 70-75% from Nov-Jan through Apr-Jun. The predicted continuation of elevated chances for El Niño well into spring/early summer 2019 hints at the possibility of a two-year El Niño episode, likely related to the late predicted onset of El Niño in 2018. Probabilities for La Niña are less than 5% throughout the entire forecast period. A caution regarding this latest set of model-based ENSO plume predictions, is that factors such as known specific model biases and recent changes that the models may have missed will be taken into account in the next official outlook to be generated and issued early next month by CPC and IRI, which will include some human judgment in combination with the model guidance.
Climatological Probabilities
Season |
La Niña |
Neutral |
El Niño |
DJF |
36% |
30% |
34% |
JFM |
34% |
38% |
28% |
FMA |
28% |
49% |
23% |
MAM |
23% |
56% |
21% |
AMJ |
21% |
58% |
21% |
MJJ |
21% |
56% |
23% |
JJA |
23% |
54% |
23% |
JAS |
25% |
51% |
24% |
ASO |
26% |
47% |
27% |
SON |
29% |
39% |
32% |
OND |
32% |
33% |
35% |
NDJ |
35% |
29% |
36% |
IRI/CPC Mid-Month Model-Based ENSO Forecast Probabilities
Season |
La Niña |
Neutral |
El Niño |
SON 2018 |
0% |
45% |
55% |
OND 2018 |
1% |
31% |
68% |
NDJ 2018 |
1% |
27% |
72% |
DJF 2018 |
1% |
27% |
72% |
JFM 2019 |
1% |
27% |
72% |
FMA 2019 |
0% |
26% |
74% |
MAM 2019 |
0% |
24% |
76% |
AMJ 2019 |
0% |
29% |
71% |
MJJ 2019 |
2% |
36% |
62% |