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Multi-decadal variation of ENSO forecast skill since the late 1800s

‪Jiale Lou, Matthew Newman, Andrew Hoell

2023npj Climate and Atmospheric Science30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Diagnosing El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) predictability within operational forecast models is hindered by computational expense and the need for initialization with three-dimensional fields generated by global data assimilation. We instead examine multi-year ENSO predictability since the late 1800s using the model-analog technique, which has neither limitation. We first draw global coupled model states from pre-industrial control simulations, from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6, that are chosen to initially match observed monthly sea surface temperature and height anomalies in the Tropics. Their subsequent 36-month model evolution are the hindcasts, whose 20 th century ENSO skill is comparable to twice-yearly hindcasts generated by a state-of-the-art European operational forecasting system. Despite the so-called spring predictability barrier, present throughout the record, there is substantial second-year ENSO skill, especially after 1960. Overall, ENSO exhibited notably high values of both amplitude and skill towards the end of the 19 th century, and again in recent decades.

Topics & Concepts

PredictabilityInitializationClimatologyForecast skillEl Niño Southern OscillationData assimilationEnvironmental scienceMeteorologyCoupled model intercomparison projectForcing (mathematics)Climate modelComputer scienceGeographyGeologyOceanographyMathematicsClimate changeStatisticsProgramming languageClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
Multi-decadal variation of ENSO forecast skill since the late 1800s | Litcius