Official United Kingdom & Europe Summer Forecast 2014

After a warm and record wet winter, the spring pattern has turned around with warmer and drier than normal conditions which could have significant implications for later down the road.

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This drier but not completely dry pattern has helped drain some of the saturated soil covering much of the UK and Ireland. This is important when it comes to atmospheric pressure and temperature into the warm season.

This has also helped sway me more towards a warmer summer ahead.

As it stands and when taking into account all current factors including current and past pattern, SST temperature profile both local and global, the ENSO status and forecast through the next 6 months and aspects such as solar cycle, I am swaying towards a warmer and drier than normal summer and the second straight ‘good’ summer for the UK and Ireland.

I believe this summer could be a hot, dry one for much of Europe with potential for a significant heat wave across a broad area of the continent, similar but likely not as extreme as 2003.

My summer ideas have been laid out before you now for some time but I have been hesitant in providing detail simply because I needed to find out how the spring pattern would turn out. Had it continued wet like we saw during the winter then it would have likely been a much more disappointing summer, similar to 2012.

So, warmer, drier than normal across much of the continent but there will be cool and wet episodes. However, high pressure looks likely to dominate in the broader scheme of things. The heart of the continent may see the core of heat but it will flex back and fourth.

What has been very interesting over the last 20 days is the change is water temperature around the UK. The high pressure dominated pattern we have enjoyed has significantly warmed our surrounding waters.

Here was the start of April.

10291744_10152178526961731_6248694009311654903_n

Now.

10177312_10152178527136731_2373234713606813107_n

The water temperature profile is similar now to this time back in 2003 (below). Why bring that up and what’s significant about 2003? We of course had the big heat wave that smashed all sorts of records from the UK to Austria that summer. No, I’m not going for another summer heat wave of 2003 BUT I think we could see some major heat focused on the heart of Europe which may spread west, reaching the Low Countries, Denmark and the UK. Just look at how warm those waters are surrounding the European land mass and given the fairly dry ground helped by persistent high pressure, we could be looking at heat wave conditions this year.

Now

anomnight_4_17_2014

April 22, 2003

anomnight_4_22_2003

Now you could say, I thought if we had wet ground and warm surrounding waters that we ‘should’ see a wetter summer. Well, 2003 sure wasn’t a cool wetter summer, so what’s the difference now compared to 2012 when waters surrounding the UK were warm and an El Nino was coming on.

April 23, 2012

anomnight_4_23_2012

Note the waters were warm more widely across the Atlantic in 2012 at this time. Core of warmest then, is where the core of cold is now. Much more significant is the warm water off South America at this time in 2012. This year, though an El Nino is coming on, waters are COLD off South America. The onset of El Nino this year is quite different to the Nino back then and interestingly similar to 2003. Positioning of warm and cold water over the Pacific has global precipitation distribution influence.

So, colder water over the central Atlantic and off South America, coupled with a drier, warmer spring here is likely to make for a different summer to 2012. By this stage in 2012, we already had a record wet April and that pattern continued into and through summer that year. SEE SIMILARITY IN GLOBAL WATER TEMPS BETWEEN LATE APRIL 2014 AND 2003. Waters surrounding the UK were warm with core of warmest to the north but notice the warm west Pacific/cold east Pacific in 2003 like we have now.

Another potential player is the solar max were just coming off. Though MUCH weaker, 2003 came off a solar max a year or two before.

Cycle22Cycle23Cycle24big(1)

As far as I’m concerned, it’s how warm do we get this summer? A lot depends on the pattern over the next few weeks. The CFSv2 has a warm May for Northern Europe extending from Ireland to Russia.

cfs-8-5-2014

Modelling is in good agreement that summer 2014 is warmer and drier than normal across much of Europe. Jamstec has ALL of Europe warm, CFSv2 has a warm north and cool south.

cfs-8-6-2014

cfs-8-7-2014

cfs-8-8-2014

Jamstec Precip

tprep_glob_JJA2014_1mar2014

Temperature

temp2_glob_JJA2014_1mar2014

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