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La Nina to stick around through 2012

El Nino will return and likely will bring a little more rainfall than usual to the Southwest. But first, the region likely will experience from one year to 18 months of continued dry conditions, says Mark Fox, warning and coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service.

December 30, 2011

2 Min Read

El Nino will return and likely will bring a little more rainfall than usual to the Southwest.

But first, the region likely will experience from one year to 18 months of continued dry conditions, says Mark Fox, warning and coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service.

Fox spoke at the Ag Technology Conference in Commerce, Texas, in early December and said that although “forecasting weather is not the easiest thing to do it’s not the hardest either. It requires good observation, good models and common sense.”

All those factors point to continuation of La Nina conditions at least into spring and summer,” he said.

“Spring and summer likely will be dryer and hotter than normal,” Fox said. “But we don’t expect next summer to be as hot as it was in 2011.”

He said suggestions that drought conditions could persist into 2020 may be overblown. “We don’t have data to support that, but the climate for the next one to 1.5 years will be dry.”

He said outlook now is similar to the same period a year ago.

“Most models indicate that by the end of 2012, El Nino will take over and conditions will be wetter in 2013 and 2014.”

Fox said under the best of conditions Texas weather is “highly variable.” He pointed to last winter as an example. Most audience members responded that the winter of 2011 was colder than usual. In fact, last winter temperatures averaged about 3 degrees higher than normal. Most people recall the extremely cold week in early January, however, when temperatures plunged and snow and sleet covered the area.

“We had one really bad week, but we did not get a lot of winter rain,” Fox said. “There is no such thing as a normal winter. We will see wild swings one way or the other.”

He said the outlook last winter was for “way above average temperatures. We had about normal average temperatures.”

He also said late November and December rainfall may bring false hope to farmers and ranchers. Northeast Texas received as much as 5 inches of rain during that period, but Fox said the area needs a lot more and heavier rains to refill lakes, streams and stock tanks.

He also said computer models suggest a second straight year of La Nina. “Most models say it will be at least next year before we get out of this pattern. In Texas, models show a 40 percent chance of higher than normal temperatures and 50 percent or higher chances of less rainfall.

“I hope we’re wrong about that,” he said. But he also noted that the El Nino, La Nina phenomenon has been observed for 100s of years and it “affects weather cycles about every one to two years.”

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