As predicted, La Niña is collapsing, which should be good news for those worried about water supplies.
La Niña is associated with cooler-than-normal surface ocean temperatures in the central tropic Pacific: what is known as the Nino 3.4 region (see below).
The latest NOAA forecast of temperatures in the Nino 3.4 area shows rapid warming, with the cool surface waters gone by April. Neutral conditions will be in place then.
So why should you care?
La Niña tends to produce big ridges of high pressure in the Gulf of Alaska, with occasional breakthroughs of moisture to the south (see schematic below). We saw a lot of this configuration after January 1; however, the pattern shifted a bit to our south.
In January, the coastal high pressure produced dry conditions over the NW, and the precipitation was mainly directed into central and southern CA. A modest shift in the pattern has made a big difference for the Northwest.
But as the La Nina weakened this month, the ridge weakened, and low pressure replaced it, producing the cooler/wetter conditions of the past weeks.
You can see this transition in the figure below, which shows upper-level maps for January 4 to a few days ago. Red indicated higher than normal neights (pressures)
January 7-21 had a huge ridge located off of southern BC....no wonder we were dry!
January 11-Feb 9 was transitional, with the ridge weakening.
Feb 6-21 was VERY different, with troughing (low pressure over the West Coast).
Thus, no reason to expect a return of the high-pressure ridging that kept us dry and warm.






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