*Works for me! I don't mind shoveling rain.*
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Another
unusually warm winter forecast for Alaska
1
August, 2015
For
those who loathed or loved last winter’s non-wintery Alaska
weather, climate scientists have an important message: There is a
good chance of a repeat this winter.
Forces
at sea, in the atmosphere and on land, both short-term and long-term,
are combining to create what might be a perfect storm of heat for
Alaska. That means another much-warmer-than-normal winter is expected
for Alaska and northwestern North America.
“You
might not want to buy that 70-below parka,” said Rick Thoman, the
National Weather Service’s Alaska climate science and services
manager and one of the scientists focused on winter even in the warm
days of Alaska’s summer.
All
of Alaska is likely to be warmer
than normal in the next three months,
according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s Climate
Prediction Center.
Probabilities of unusual warmth edge up to 80 percent in the Gulf of
Alaska coastal areas. The outlook extending into the next year
also predicts warmer than normal temperatures for almost all of the
state, with similar heat expected in the Pacific Northwest and
the West Coast.
The
warmth has multiple sources: persistently high sea surface
temperatures, which are expected to linger; a shift into a positive
and warm phase of the cyclical Pacific
Decadal Oscillation;
a powerfulEl
Nino that
is developing in the Pacific; and wavy jet-stream
patterns that
bring warm weather north and cold weather south.
“That’s
kind of in the background that everything’s projected onto. Every
year, that background gets a little brighter, a little redder,”
said Thoman, who prepared the Alaska section of the
August/September/October forecast.
Such
was the case with Alaska’s extreme winter of 2014-15, with average
surface temperatures running above normal by
4 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit from December to February and, in
Anchorage, a record-low
snowfall.
The
weird winter was more the product of unusual short-term events than
the gradual long-term warming resulting from human-caused climate
change, said Nicholas
Bond,
a research meteorologist and climatologist at the University of
Washington. Still, it was a sign of things to come, he said.
“This
really isn’t climate change, but it’s kind of a precursor of it.
This is what it’s going to be more often in future decades,” Bond
said. “How many decades do we have to wait until this is the new
normal? Is it the 2040s or the 2080s?”
And
how much are the short-term warming factors exacerbating long-term
warming? It is difficult to tell because systems are so complex, Bond
said. But the combination may be creating some "points of no
return," like thawing of permafrost that took millennia to form,
he said.
'The Blob,' PDO, El Nino mean warm ocean water
Short-term
forces that skewed Alaska’s weather last winter are still in place.
Sea-surface
temperatures in
the Gulf of Alaska and the northeast Pacific have been well
above normal since 2013, creating a mass of stationary warm water
that is now called “The
Blob,”
the term bestowed by Bond. The Blob is linked
to abnormal winter weather,
not just in Alaska and the Pacific Northwest but possibly across
North America, and to disruptions
in the marine system,
including the large number of seal pup strandings in California.
Its
origins are believed
to be in the western tropics,
though factors from elsewhere -- including the more rapidly
warming Arctic -- might have helped create it or exacerbate it, Bond
said.
Separate,
but possibly related to the Blob, is the cyclical Pacific Decadal
Oscillation, which started
a positive phase last year, according to NOAA.
Negative
phases, such as that which existed for about the past decade,
are associated
with colder temperatures in Alaska
and neighboring parts of Russia; positive phases are associated with
warmer temperatures.
Now
looming is another source of winter heat for Alaska and elsewhere --
an El
Nino that
is shaping up as one
of the most powerful on
record.
El
Ninos transfer heat from the western tropical Pacific eastward,
usually bringing warm and dry conditions to Alaska and the Pacific
Northwest and triggering a series of effects across North and South
America. In 2005, one of the most recent El Nino years, global
temperatures hit their highest level in a century,
according to NASA, and Arctic sea ice shrank to what was, for that
time, a record low in the satellite measurement era.
All
El Ninos are unique, and the current one isassociated
with wider areas of warm water than
even the record
1997 event,
according to NOAA data. While warm sea surface temperatures
usually follow the arrival of El Nino systems, the northeastern
Pacific was already heated up prior to the start of this El Nino, a
deviation from the normal pattern.
“We’re
a little bit in uncharted territory,” Bond said.
Added
to the other factors is the meandering jet stream that has been
taking paths that loop north and south rather than its normal steady
west-to-east movement.
The
wandering jet stream is a short-term weather force and
at the same time, according to an
emerging theory,
the product of long-term Arctic climate change. Rapid Arctic warming,
outstripping the pace in the rest of the world, is venting heat and
moisture into the northern atmosphere, upsetting the prior
equilibrium that usually keeps Arctic conditions in the Arctic and
southern conditions in the south, according to the theory.
Warming begets more warming
The
most obvious sign of Arctic
amplification --
the term used to describe the pronounced and self-reinforcing warming
in the Arctic -- is shrinking sea ice, which creates open
waters in late summer and autumn.
“As
you lose that ice, then you’re allowing a lot more evaporation.
That extreme water vapor into the Arctic atmosphere has a huge
impact,” said Jennifer
Francis,
a Rutgers University climate scientist and meteorologist who has been
studying potential
links between Arctic warming and weather
extremes in temperate latitudes.
More
heat in the atmosphere holds more moisture, creating pressure
ridges that then push the jet stream off its normal lateral
course into a looping south-north pattern, according to the theory
being explored by Francis and
some of her colleagues.The result appears to be stuck weather
patterns, and not just in the Arctic and Alaska.
Sea
ice, when it is present, reflects solar energy, an effect
called albedo.
When ice is absent, dark ocean surfaces absorb heat. Changes in
terrestrial snow cover also feed into the cycle, allowing solar
radiation to be retained as heat instead of reflected on land too,
Francis said. Clouds that form over warmer ocean and land areas trap
heat in cold seasons, and the dynamic of cloud formation itself
releases heat into the atmosphere, she said.
Effects
of northern warming, like enhanced
wildfires that
emit smoke
carried around the circumpolar north,
and northward-advancing
dark vegetation, stimulate
more heat and melt, as was seen dramatically in
2012 in Greenland.
If
Arctic amplification is skewing the jet stream, some potential
results include the “Ridiculously
Resilient Ridge,”
a phenomenon named and studied by Stanford University
scientist Daniel
Swain,
that has kept California and the West Coast hot and dry;
stagnant air that intensifies hazy air pollution in eastern China, a
condition directly
linked by Chinese scientists to reduced Arctic sea ice;extreme
heat events in the mid-latitudes;
and, most famously in U.S. East Coast population centers, the past
few deep-freeze winter chills attributed to a persistent Polar
Vortex.
One
prominent sea ice expert, however, has yet to be convinced that
Arctic warming is driving larger global weather patterns.
“I
would say the jury’s still out on that,” said Mark
Serreze,
director of the National
Snow and Ice Data Center.
There
is no question that the reduced sea ice affects weather regionally,
as ocean heat that has built up over the summer gets released back to
the atmosphere over places like Alaska’s North Slope, Serreze said,
pointing to dramatic
temperature increases in autumn,
the season on minimal ice.
There
is also no question that the Earth is warming as a whole, and that
this year -- thanks in part to El Nino -- will be another
hot one, Serreze said.
“We’ll
almost certainly break a record high for global air temperature this
year,” he said. “That’s almost a given.”
But
he has yet to be convinced that Arctic changes carry enough punch
high enough into the troposphere to affect mid-latitude weather. It
could be that the Arctic is more affected by the rest of the world,
and “the sea ice is just kind of the tail of the dog” affected by
warming elsewhere, not causing warming elsewhere, he said.
Researchers
expect it will take many more years of study to determine
conclusively whether Arctic warming is actually changing
the jet stream and weather patterns far south of the region. For now,
climatologists say, plenty of other factors are pointing to
warmer-than-normal conditions in the months to come.
All
is not doom and gloom for fans of snowy Alaska winters, however.
While
temperatures may be warmer than normal, “That doesn’t mean it’s
going to be another 20-inch snow year in Anchorage,” Thoman said.
“One storm could give you that.”
And
a positive Pacific Decadal Oscillation could quickly become negative,
the scientists say.
“It
can flip back, and it can do it quite abruptly,” Francis said. El
Ninos are generally followed by cold La Ninas, they say.
Plus, uncertainties and day-to-day fluctuations can tip weather
patterns, they say.
“All
we can do is say the deck is stacked," Bond says. "The deal
of the cards is going to be what the deal of the cards is."
Map:
Tracking Alaska's wildfires
As
July turns to August, Alaska’s wildfires continue to burn.
Nearly
5 million acres of Alaska forest has been consumed in wildfires this
summer, according to the Alaska Interagency Coordination Center, with
some saying this year may be the state’s worst wildfire season on
record.
More
than 700 fires have swept across the state. Around 300 of the fires
have been deemed human-caused, and have burned about 22,000 acres of
land; the rest were sparked by lightning, and have burned the vast
majority of acreage.
Among
the fires staffed on July 30, the roughly 31,000 acre Aggie Creek
fire Northwest of Fairbanks burning near the Trans-Alaska Pipeline
System; the Long Lake fire, burning near Northway Village; and the
Spicer Creek fire northeast of Tanana.
A
map created by University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute
research associate professor Martin Stuefer and research assistant
Christine Waigl as part of the university's Arctic Region
Supercomputing Center's UAFSMOKE program tracks the roughly 250
active fires in the state, giving Alaskans an up-to-date look at the
number, size and status of each fire.
For
a list of fires in Alaska GO
HERE
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