January 2025 update: La Niña is here
La Niña conditions emerged in the tropical Pacific in December. There’s a 59% chance La Niña will persist through February–April, followed by a 60% chance of neutral conditions in March–May. Read on for the recent observations that led us to declare the (long-awaited) onset of La Niña and lots of details for current and potential upcoming conditions.
Just the facts, ma’am
A quick briefing, if you’re just joining us—La Niña is one phase of the El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO), a pattern of sea surface temperature and atmospheric changes in the tropical Pacific Ocean. La Niña’s signature is cooler-than-average surface water in the east-central Equatorial Pacific, while its counterpart, El Niño, features warmer-than-average surface water. The atmospheric circulation over the tropical Pacific, called the Walker circulation, exhibits characteristic changes during La Niña and El Niño, so we call ENSO a “coupled” ocean-atmosphere system. ENSO is a seasonal phenomenon, meaning it lasts for several months in a row. The atmospheric changes of ENSO are communicated all around the world, changing temperature and rain/snow patterns in known ways.
Time to get down to brass tacks
Ok! We’ve been expecting La Niña to show up since last spring. While she’s dragged her heels, all the pieces came together this past month.
The tropical Pacific sea surface temperature loitered in ENSO-neutral since April 2024, with our primary ENSO monitoring index, the Niño-3.4 index, within 0.5 °C of the long-term average. In December, however, the Niño-3.4 index was -0.6 °C, according to the ERSSTv5, our most reliable long-term sea surface temperature dataset.
With the Niño-3.4 Index exceeding the La Niña threshold of -0.5 °C, we can move on to the second box on our flowchart—do we think the Niño-3.4 index is going to stay in La Niña territory for the next several seasons? (“Seasons” here means any 3-month-average period.) The consensus among our computer climate models is yes. Also, there is a substantial amount of cooler-than-average water under the surface of the tropical Pacific, which will provide a source for the surface over the next few months.
So, we’re on to the third box, which has actually been checked for a while now (more on that later). The atmosphere has been looking La Niña-ish for months, with stronger-than-average trade winds, more clouds and rain over Indonesia, and drier conditions over the central Pacific—all hallmarks of an amped-up Walker circulation. In December, the Equatorial Southern Oscillation Index (EQSOI), which measures the difference in surface pressure between the western and eastern Pacific, was 1.5 (positive values indicate a stronger Walker circulation). In fact, this is the 5th-strongest December EQSOI in the historical record. Drumroll… La Niña conditions have developed.
Break it down for me
There are a lot of different tidbits I want to tell you about this month, so let’s go Q&A-style.
How long will La Niña last?
There’s a reason our flowchart says “the next several seasons” instead of providing a specific number: we can make predictions, but it’s impossible to know ahead of time exactly how long La Niña conditions will last. To be categorized as a La Niña event in our historical record, the three-month-average Niño-3.4 Index (the Oceanic Niño Index) needs to stay at least 0.5 °C below average for at least five consecutive, overlapping seasons. Current odds are 60% that the March–May Oceanic Niño Index will be neutral, which would make this event last fewer than five. That’s not to say it’s impossible for this La Niña to last longer, of course—nature is always full of surprises! There is a ~40% chance for La Niña to persist into March-May 2025.
How strong will La Niña be?
It’s very likely this La Niña will be weak, with the Niño-3.4 index unlikely to reach -1.0 °C for a season. This is based on computer model guidance and how late in the year La Niña conditions emerged. ENSO events peak in the northern Hemisphere winter, and there’s just not a lot of time for La Niña to strengthen.
Can La Niña still affect our winter climate?
Sure can, although a weak La Niña tends to have a weaker influence over temperature and precipitation patterns.
Why was La Niña so slow to develop?
The short answer to this is “we don’t yet know.” The emergence of La Niña-like atmospheric conditions before substantial tropical Pacific Ocean surface cooling was unusual, though. The global oceans have been running much, much warmer than average for more than a year, which might have had a hand in La Niña’s delay. When we calculate the Niño-3.4 index but account for the temperature of the tropical oceans (the “Relative Niño-3.4 index”) we get an index that’s been in La Niña territory for months. Only this past year or so has the difference between the traditional and relative Niño-3.4 indexes been so large, and we’re still researching this new measurement and all the implications for ENSO development and impacts in a warmer world.
Has La Niña had any impact on temperature and rain patterns yet?
La Niña affects global climate primarily through atmospheric changes, and since the tropical atmosphere has been looking like La Niña for a while, this is a reasonable question! The global climate is incredibly complicated, and even a big factor like ENSO is only one player. Other climate patterns, climate change trends, and random variability can have a strong influence on overall seasonal patterns. That said, it’s interesting that the October–December 2024 temperature and rain/snow patterns over the U.S. resemble the expected patterns from previous La Niña events. See the October–December La Nina temperature and rain/snow maps, and here’s the general page if you would like to poke around.
Temperature has a strong influence from climate trends, and the October–December 2024 temperature pattern over the U.S. is clearly dominated by more warmth.
You’re running out of column inches. Any last tidbits?
Thanks for asking! Speaking of La Niña impacts, you might recall there’s a link between La Niña and active Atlantic hurricane seasons. In brief, La Niña reduces vertical wind shear—the difference between near-surface winds and upper-level winds—and makes it easier for hurricanes to grow. Interestingly, the August–October 2024 wind shear in the Atlantic Main Development Region (an area of the Atlantic where hurricanes tend to develop) was the weakest since 1950 (h/t NOAA’s Matt Rosencrans). We can’t say how much of it was related to La Niña, but given the relative Niño-3.4 index has been in La Niña territory for a while now, it’s an interesting situation that bears more research.
The bottom line
As this unusual La Niña progresses, we’ll be here to keep you updated on all things ENSO!
Comments
Heating source in Pacific Ocean
I have published these papers:1) Further FGGE Forecasts for Amazon Basin Rainfall the authors are Julio Buchmann, Jan Paegle, Lawrence Buja and Robert E. Dickinson at Monthly Weather Review in 1989 2) The Dynamical Basis of Regional Motion Fields Sourrounding Located Tropical Heating the authors are Julio Buchmann, Lawrence E. Buja, Julia Nogues-Paegle and Jan Paegle at the Journal of Climate in 1995.
La Nina
Unfortunately for California and the brutal wildfires we are experiencing, La does look like it has affected our winter pattern and January precipitation looks bleak right now. I am already starting to think about ENSO next year. Too long a lead time with the models for any reliance. But if we went with the CFSv2 at this time we are looking at ENSO neutral year next year. I can't remember the last time we've had one of those and haven't had many over the last decade. Just think about the contributors here for once talking about how much ENSO is not going to factor into weather.
It has been a while, for…
It has been a while, for sure. 2019–2020 was a neutral winter, but that's the only one we've had since the ENSO Blog started in 2014!
Very well written, thanks!!
Very well written, thanks!!
Date error
Please see the end date of this *** 2024**** ^^^^ Shouldn't that be 2025?
Fixed! Thanks.
Fixed! Thanks.
La Niña Modoki
The ONI is not over 0.5. I believe this is more a La Niña Modoki. I don’t expect to have cooling right off the coast of South America. We have a fast warming with 26C isotherm around 10-15m depth.
You're right, the most…
You're right, the most recent ONI, October–December, is only -0.4 C. We think it's very likely that the November–January ONI will pass the La Nina threshold.
NOTHING resembles any Nina…
NOTHING resembles any Nina. 100% of the tropical countries are smashing all heat records set during 2023/2024, 100% ! including all oceania and south america and including Ecuador coast (GUayaquil dec 2024 much warmer than dec 2023 and all records smashed over and over again) and all central america, the EXACT opposite of what we would expect ina Nina or even a transition.
You fail to understand teh causes because you clearly don't have an idea on what it's been going on with the current drop of the low clouds in the tropics and the reduction of the albedo. Climatology is NOT for you. Leave it to the REAL EXPERTS and not politicians who pretends to understand it.
I think the tropics are…
I think the tropics are surely going to be warmer than climatology due to global warming. For La Niña, I think what matters is whether the eastern equatorial Pacific is relatively colder than the rest of the tropical oceans.
Experts
1. For what it's worth, the people who write this blog are some of the world's foremost experts on ENSO. And, every time one of them writes a post, they make it very clear just how knowledgeable they are about this.
2. Unlike politicians, who regularly speak in terms of certainties (and who will sometimes even double down when they are wrong, or who will insist that the experts are wrong and that they are right), the people who write these blog posts readily acknowledge what they don't know, while saying what they need more information on and what they are currently researching.
3. You made some assertions in your post, including how large parts of Latin America are setting heat records, a drop In low clouds in the tropics, and a reduction in albedo. So, what evidence backs them up? And, what other explanations (aside from the current state of ENSO) are possible for the phenomena you described?
West Pacific region
What does this mean for likely Cyclone formation in the western Pacific? Does it lower the chances of them forming and curtail their potential strength?
Asking as we are sail towards the Solomans...
Thanks Si
El Nina
Here in Louisiana we have what we call wicked weather...as far as El Nina in certain parts we only getting rain no freezing.just cold which I love but messy muddy and rainy so for us here we do not get much winter or snow maybe way up by Shreveport but around winnsboro not so much 9 x out of 10
La niña
I always thought that a La Niña winter meant a lot of snow for Idaho and Montana. So far, it is missing us here in Hamilton MT. I'm not sure what is going on, but it's confusing.
La Nina
There is a term the experts use here call variability. That means that the expected impacts from La Nina are not going to occur 100% of the time. La Nina increases the odds of certain impacts but there are times the opposite happens. La Ninas usually result in dry years in California but every once in awhile result in a wet year. This is also a weaker rather than stronger event which means there is more uncertainty
Thanks, Bob!
Thanks, Bob!
Thank you Nathaniel For all…
Thank you Nathaniel
For all the knowledge you and all the experts have brought to the blog and for answering all of our questions.
ENSO Neutral Conditions Persist
The Oni index at https://origin.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ensostuff… shows OND 2024 at -0.4°C.
Yes currently ENSO Neutral Conditions Persist - Earliest Potential First La Niña Thresh Hold Expected January end.
Hope NOAA has not changed the criteria for La Nina !
Relative Nina
I like that you all are researching the Relative Nina. It must be something like looking for a moving target inside another moving target. A La Nina "Event" being different than a qualified, so to speak, "Historically Recorded Event". Do you look back and adjust your measurement requirements versus the correlated coupling of atmosphere during non-qualified events? As looking back is always difficult for reducing biases, have you developed any real world predictive tests other than computer models? That sounds like a near impossibility to me but I never know.
Until recently (just the…
Until recently (just the past year), the traditional Nino-3.4 and the relative Nino-3.4 were nearly the same. Last month, I showed some figures comparing the atmospheric coupling in previous observed events, but it would be interesting to examine the atmospheric response to the relative Nino using initialized coupled models like the NMME.
Has This Ever Happened Before?
I am just curious to know whether if there were situations where a La Niña Advisory was declared before, but not enough for a sufficient duration to officially be a La Niña? The same could be said for El Niño and an El Niño Advisory declaration as well. If it hasn't happened before, could this be a first?
It's my understanding that the Australian counterpart has not officially called a La Niña even though most of the typical indicators have been met (needs to be -0.8°C in the Niño3.4 SST for at least 3 months to become established).
I'm sure we've never been in…
I'm sure we've never been in the same situation, because nature is infinitely variable! However, the La Nina of 2016-17 was pretty borderline when we declared it: https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/enso/november-2016-la-ni%C3…;
Relative Niño
It sounds like you are studying this new Relative Niño index, to see how accurate it is compared to the current measures you use. Whenever you get some answers, would you include them in one of your blog posts?
Solar Storms?
What can we expect this year in the tropical Atlantic? Did I really read right yesterday about a Nina effect moving toward Puerto Rico?
Gracia
Will this be considered as a La Nina event in the records?
Hello there,
Thank you for the informative piece - I have learnt alot more on how periods can be classified into La Nina events, especially with the useful flowchart which helps us in understanding the train of though in classificaiton.
Could I just check, given that we have classified the current period as La Nina, will it eventually be shown on the following CPC website: https://origin.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/ensostuff… that is a La Nina event?
According the methodology, "By historical standards, to be classified as a full-fledged El Niño or La Niña episode, these thresholds must be exceeded for a period of at least 5 consecutive overlapping 3-month seasons." Therefore, will this event be reflected as a La Nina event eventually in the historical records, if we move into an ENSO-neutral before we see 5 consecutive overlapping 3-month seasons?
Thank you once again!
That's a good question, Adam…
That's a good question, Adam. Given how late this event unfolded, it raises some doubt that we will reach the 5-season threshold. We will have to see, but if it doesn't reach 5 (say, if only NDJ through FMA are below -0.5C), then it will not show up as an event on the CPC website.
It's also worth mentioning that event classification can change when the climatology base periods get updated every 5 years. Currently we use the 1991-2020 base period to define ONI, but soon that will change to 1996-2025, and so some of the recent ONI values will shift slightly. Sometimes those slight shifts can move an event in or out of the 5-season threshold.
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