Saturday April 4th… Dear Diary. The main purpose of this ongoing blog will be to track United States extreme or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ET’s will be listed at the very end of my article, below the news section for each day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ET’s (not extraterrestrials)😉
Main Topic: A Forecast Bad Atlantic Hurricane Season… An Ominous Warning For Authorities Dealing With COVID19
Dear Diary. As far as weather effects from climate change go, this spring as of early April across the United States has been relatively benign. There has not been much flooding or widespread tornadic outbreaks. Thank goodness because all available emergency resources are now combating COVID19. FEMA (the Federal Emergency Management Agency) is already hard pressed because of the coronavirus crisis and may not be able to deal effectively with more weather related calamities. They should prepare, though, since this run of good weather can’t last much longer given that the planet also has a fever, much like everyone with the COVID19 contagion.
We probably will still be in the midst of dealing with COVID19 this summer into the fall. On top of any heat waves, which are now more likely due to climate change, we may have an exacerbated, active Atlantic hurricane season. Can we handle another Maria or Harvey while tending to the sick from coronavirus? Sadly, I rather doubt it. Here is a report from Bob Henson relating one forecast for a bad hurricane season and the climatological factors making up this prognostication:
CSU Predicts Busier-Than-Average Atlantic Hurricane Season in 2020
Bob Henson · April 2, 2020, 6:08 PM EDT
Above: A photo from the International Space Station of Category 5 Hurricane Dorian on September 2, 2019, during its devastating stall over the northwestern Bahamas. (ISS via NASA Earth Observatory)
The upcoming hurricane season is likely to be more active than usual, according to the April outlook from a team at Colorado State University that has been issuing seasonal hurricane predictions for decades. In its outlook issued Thursday, the CSU group is calling for a total of 16 named storms, 8 hurricanes, and 4 major hurricanes, compared to the long-term average (1981-2010) of 12.1 named storms, 6.4 hurricanes, and 2.7 major hurricanes. The group is also projecting an accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index of 150, compared to the long-term average of 106.
This is only the fifth time in the 26-year history of CSU’s April forecasts that the team has called for at least 16 named storms. Of those four other years, all but one ended up producing at least 14 named storms.
Unusually warm sea surface temperatures (SSTs) during the first quarter of this year, in two distinct parts of the globe, are among the main factors that pushed CSU’s forecast toward the high side.
—Warm SSTs across the eastern Atlantic, from the tropics to latitude 50°N, are associated with weaker trade winds, lower surface pressures, and warmer SSTs over the tropical Atlantic during the subsequent hurricane season.
—Warm SSTs in the Coral Sea, northeast of Australia, tend to inhibit the development of El Niño, which typically acts to suppress hurricane development in the Atlantic.
Seasonal forecast models—especially those from NASA, NOAA, and the Australian Bureau of Meteorology—have leaned increasingly toward the development of a La Niña event later this year. The long-range outlook from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) is calling for neutral conditions.
A cautionary note: “The early April forecast is the earliest seasonal forecast issued by Colorado State University and has modest long-term skill when evaluated in hindcast mode,” notes the outlook, which is produced by CSU’s Phil Klotzbach, Michael Bell, and Jhordanne Jones.
For this year’s April outlook, the CSU team debuted a more sophisticated (and more complex!) version of its forecast strategy. The CSU outlooks originated as a statistical product, correlating observed features with characteristics of the hurricane season to come. Last year the team added a statistical-dynamical component, based on output from the ECMWF’s SEAS5 seasonal modeling system and developed with the Barcelona Supercomputing Centre. Like other statistical-dynamical models, SEAS5 incorporates the state of the oceans and sea ice to produce longer-range outlooks than would be possible using the atmosphere alone.
This year CSU has added a second statistical-dynamical scheme, this one based on the UK Met Office’s GloSea5 seasonal prediction system. When evaluated in hindcast mode (predicting past events as if they were occurring in real time), the SEAS5 and GloSea5 models show measurable skill as soon as March in predicting surface winds for July over the Main Development Region of the Atlantic (see graphic below). In turn, July wind shear is a useful index to the amount of tropical cyclone activity one might expect in the Atlantic over the following months.
Correlation between SEAS5 and GloSea5 model hindcasts issued at various lead times and July surface winds in the tropical Atlantic and Caribbean based on data from 1993 to 2016. (CSU)
This year’s 2020 outlook from CSU is based on five sources of input:
—the two statistical-dynamical schemes above
—a new incarnation of the statistical scheme, based on data from 1982 to 2019
—the analog method, which looks for years that had conditions similar to those observed in February-March and those being projected for August-October
—qualitative adjustments based on processes beyond the scope of the other inputs
Summary of the early April guidance from the statistical scheme, the two statistical/dynamical schemes, the analog method, the average of those four techniques, and the adjusted final forecast for the 2020 hurricane season. (CSU)
The best analog years for 2020, as identified by CSU, are:
1960 (8 named storms, 4 hurricanes, 2 major hurricanes, ACE of 73)
1966 (11 named storms, 7 hurricanes, 3 major hurricanes, ACE of 145)
1980 (11 named storms, 9 hurricanes, 2 major hurricanes, ACE of 149)
1996 (13 named storms, 9 hurricanes, 6 major hurricanes, ACE of 166)
2008 (16 named storms, 8 hurricanes, 5 major hurricanes, ACE of 146)
Notably, the statistical-dynamical input from SEAS5 correctly called for a busier-than-average season in 2019—whereas the statistical and analog guidance was much more bearish, helping to pull pulling CSU’s April outlook toward a quieter-than-average season. This year’s SEAS5 guidance is even more bullish than last year’s, with a projected ACE of 180.
“There is a maze of changing physical linkages between the many variables. These linkages can undergo unknown changes from weekly to decadal time scales,” notes the forecast team. “It is impossible to understand how all of these processes interact with each other. No one can completely understand the full complexity of the atmosphere-ocean system. But, it is still possible to develop a reliable statistical forecast scheme which incorporates a number of the climate system’s non-linear interactions.”
CSU is also calling for higher-than-normal probabilities of hurricane landfall along the U.S. Gulf and Atlantic coasts, with each coast having close to a 45% chance of landfall compared to the usual odds of around 30%. However, as CSU stresses in its outlook, just one landfalling hurricane can lead to disaster even in an otherwise “quiet” season. See the report by weather.com’s Jonathan Belles and Brian Donegan for more perspective on the latest CSU outlook.
A new feature of CSU’s outlooks this year: Probability of exceedance plot for hurricane numbers for the upcoming Atlantic hurricane season. The values on the x-axis indicate that the number of hurricanes exceeds that specific number. For example, 97% of Atlantic hurricane seasons from 1950-2019 have had more than two hurricanes. (CSU)
Jeff Masters weighs in
WU co-founder and Cat 6 founder Dr. Jeff Masters had this to say about today’s release:
“I think the April 2020 CSU forecast has an above-average chance of success, given strong model agreement and very warm Atlantic SSTs currently in place. However, April forecasts of hurricane season activity have had little or no skill in the past, primarily since they must deal with the so-called ‘spring predictability barrier’. April is the time of year when the El Niño/La Niña phenomenon commonly undergoes a rapid change from one state to another, making it difficult to predict whether we will have El Niño, La Niña, or neutral conditions in place for the coming hurricane season.
“Last year’s CSU April forecast called for a slightly below-average 2019 Atlantic hurricane season, with 13 named storms, 5 hurricanes, 2 intense hurricanes, and an Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) of 92. This forecast ended up being below the mark, as the season actually had 18 named storms, 6 hurricanes, 3 major hurricanes, and an ACE of 130.
“The next CSU forecast, due on June 4, is worth paying more attention to. Their late May/early June forecasts have shown considerable skill over the years.”
NOAA issues its first seasonal hurricane forecast for 2020 in late May, with an update in August. TropicalStormRisk.com will release its first forecast for 2020 on April 7.
The Weather Company’s primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, IBM.
Bob Henson
Bob Henson is a meteorologist and writer at weather.com, where he co-produces the Category 6 news site at Weather Underground. He spent many years at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and is the author of “The Thinking Person’s Guide to Climate Change” and “Weather on the Air: A History of Broadcast Meteorology.”
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Even during an active hurricane season we might get lucky with most strong systems veering east away from the continental U.S. Conversely, we might see bad luck as in the El Nino year of 1992 when there were few hurricanes, but the worst, Andrew, got steered into South Florida. Let’s prepare for the worst nature can deal out, though, given we just have two months until the beginning of the 2020 hurricane season.
Now, here are some of todays articles on the horrendous coronavirus pandemic:
Here is more climate and weather news from Saturday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article.)
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Guy Walton “The Climate Guy”