Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Tropical North Pacific Ocean Nearing a Historic Tropical Cyclone Drought

Jon Erdman and Jonathan Belles
Published: June 29,2016

The dearth of named tropical cyclones in the tropical northern Pacific Ocean in 2016 is nearing record territory after one of the most hyperactive years in 2015.
(MORE: Hurricane Season Outlook | Hurricane Season Q & A | Debunking Hurricane Myths)
There hasn't been a single named storm of at least tropical storm intensity in the North Pacific Basin since Hurricane Pali became a January oddball just north of the equator and well southwest of Hawaii.
Most impressive is the lack of a single tropical storm, much less a typhoon (the term for a hurricane in the western North Pacific Basin), west of the international date line since mid-December 2015, in the world's typically busiest tropical cyclone corridor.

Current Satellite Image: Northwest Pacific Ocean
This is rapidly approaching the record longest stretch without at least a single tropical storm in the western North Pacific basin in 66 years of records, according to Colorado State University tropical scientist Dr. Phil Klotzbach.
Longest Northwest Pacific Stretches Without a Single Tropical Storm
(Source: Joint Typhoon Warning Center archive)
Start, End DatesConsecutive Days
Dec. 15, 1972 - June 30, 1973198
Dec. 22, 1997 - July 7, 1998198
Dec. 11, 1982 - June 24, 1983197
Dec. 17, 2015 - ? (through June 29, 2016)196
(Note: A correction has been made to the current streak, previously reported to have started on December 15, 2015.)
By late June 2015, there had already been eight tropical cyclones in the northwest Pacific basin, including three super typhoons of Category 5 equivalent intensity.
The eastern North Pacific basin has already set a record long wait for the first tropical storm in 2016.
June 21, 2009, was the previous record latest date of the eastern Pacific hurricane season's first named storm (Andres). Reliable records in the eastern Pacific basin date to 1971.
Tropical Depression One-E made a failed attempt to become the first of the season in early June. On average, the basin would've seen two named storms, one of which would reach hurricane strength, by late June.
A westward-moving tropical wave may finally snap this eastern Pacific record-long wait by this weekend, potentially becoming the season's first eastern Pacific tropical storm, "Agatha" well off the Mexican coast.

Current Satellite Image: Northeast Pacific Ocean
One year ago, there already had been a pair of Category 4 hurricanes – Andres and Blanca – in the eastern Pacific Basin, and a third named storm, Carlos, also became a hurricane by mid-June 2015.
Fueled in part by a record-tying El Niño, the eastern Pacific Basin saw a record nine hurricanes reach at least Category 3 intensity in 2015, as well as the strongest tropical cyclone on record in the Western Hemisphere, Hurricane Patricia.
The Central Pacific Basin (from 140 degrees west longitude until the international date line, including Hawaii) also set a record for activity in 2015, with 14 named storms and eight hurricanes, five of which reached at least Category 3 intensity. At one time, three Category 4 hurricanes were active at once in the central and eastern Pacific basins for the first time on record.
(MORE: 11 Things We Remember About the 2015 Hurricane Season)
Thanks in large part to the snoozing north Pacific basin, Klotzbach noted that tropical cyclone activity (measured by the accumulated cyclone energy or ACE index) in the northern hemisphere, despite the four named storms so far in the Atlantic basin, set a 45-year record low for the period from Jan. 16 to June 23, 2016.

How Unusual Is This 'Drought?'

This is the first time in records dating to 1950 that the entire North Pacific Basin has failed to generate a single tropical storm from Jan. 15 through June 21, according to Klotzbach (Note: "Agatha" formed on June 13, 1998, putting an end to the previous record streak).
Klotzbach also said this is only the second time in 66 years a period from January 16 - June 28 has not produced a single hurricane-strength tropical cyclone anywhere in the Northern Hemisphere, joining 1977 as the only other such time.
(MORE: You Can Help Improve the Historical Record of Hurricanes)
Despite that, these long dry spells have happened before.
"These types of tropical cyclone droughts are fairly common when moving away from strong El Niño seasons," said Klotzbach via Twitter.
(MORE: How Unusual Are Hawaii Hurricanes?)
As shown in the previous table, Klotzbach noted the four longest such droughts in the western Pacific Basin, including the current event, all immediately followed strong El Niños.
"Both the El Niño and the Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO) have tended to force sinking motion over the Northwest Pacific," said Klotzbach. The MJO is a large-scale, long-period wave of upward and downward motion that propagates around the tropical latitudes.
This sinking motion leads to drier, more stable air, fewer clouds, showers and anomalously high pressure at the surface over the western Pacific Ocean. All these factors work against the formation of tropical cyclones.
Typical tropical cyclone activity by month in the western Pacific basin from 1959-2010.
The western Pacific Basin is typically the most active area for tropical cyclones on Earth, where named storms, even typhoons, can form any month of the year.
As is the case in the eastern Pacific and Atlantic basins, western Pacific activity typically reaches a peak in August and September, so this drought won't last long.
However, with a potential developing La Niña (cooler-than-average equatorial Pacific water; opposite of El Niño) later this summer and fall, Klotzbach also pointed out tropical cyclone activity tends to be less in the Pacific during La Niña years. So perhaps the hard-hit Pacific basin may get a bit of a breather after a frenetic, record-smashing 2015.
Then again, it's important to keep in mind that it only takes one landfall to make any season "active" or "destructive."
(MORE: Are You #HurricaneStrong?)
Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been an incurable weather geek since a tornado narrowly missed his childhood home in Wisconsin at age 7.

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