
NOAA's Climate Prediction Center has released their winter outlook for the upcoming winter season, and here in the northeast we can expect, as per usual, an unpredictable winter.
The outlook consists of a long range 3 month forecast for precipitation and temperatures, as compared to average. The forecasts considers large, global scale patterns that suggest, not storm specific info, but rather general trends in the weather for different areas of the world. Some of the biggest factors include the ENSO cycle (La Nina/El Nino), the Madden-Julian Oscillation, and teleconnections of the Arctic Oscillation, North Atlantic Oscillation, Pacfic- North American Pattern, & Antarctic Oscillation.
Visit the Climate Prediction Center's webpage here to learn more about the aforementioned patterns.
For the second winter in a row, La Niña will influence weather patterns across the country, but as usual, it's not the only climate factor at play. The ‘wild card' is the lesser-known and less predictable Arctic Oscillation that could produce dramatic short-term swings in temperatures this winter.
The Arctic Oscillation is always present and fluctuates between positive and negative phases. The negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation pushes cold air into the U.S. from Canada. The Arctic Oscillation went strongly negative at times the last two winters, causing outbreaks of cold and snowy conditions in the U.S. such as the "Snowmaggedon" storm of 2009. Strong Arctic Oscillation episodes typically last a few weeks and are difficult to predict more than one to two weeks in advance
NOAA expects La Niña, which returned in August, to gradually strengthen and continue through the upcoming winter. It is associated with cooler than normal water temperatures in the tropical Pacific Ocean and influences weather throughout the world.
"The evolving La Niña will shape this winter," said Mike Halpert, deputy director of NOAA's Climate Prediction Center.
With La Niña in place Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico and parts of surrounding states are unlikely to get enough rain to alleviate the ongoing drought. Texas, the epicenter of the drought, experienced its driest 12-month period on record from October 2010 through September 2011.
Stormy periods can occur anytime during the winter season. To improve the ability to predict and track winter storms, NOAA implemented a more accurate weather forecast model on Oct.18. Data gathered from the model will support local weather forecast office efforts to prepare for and protect the public from weather events. This service is helping the country to become a Weather-Ready Nation at a time when extreme weather is on the rise.
According to the U.S. Winter Outlook (December through February) odds tilt in favor of:
Read the entire outlook here.