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Weather 2000's ENSO (El Niño/La Niña) Report incorporates our latest
meteorological research as well as valuable feedback and suggestions
from our clients over the years. The 8 page report includes a detailed
discussion, global highlights, and temperature and precipitation anomaly tables.
Long Range weather forecasting covers generally the 1 month to 12 month
time period (see FAQ). This period is crucial for Energy
Brokers, Reinsurers, Weather Derivatives Traders as well as those involved
with Risk Management and Planning in the Retail, Tourism and
Entertainment industries.
Quantitative versus Qualitative:
Seasonal forecasts have been examined by meteorologists for decades, but
the forecasts are usually qualitative and ambiguous. Vague terms
such as "Above Normal" Temperatures are commonly used, encompassing
large sections of the Nation. Our ENSO Report is
Quantitative, outlining monthly deviations from normal (i.e. +4° F),
for each of the 50 States, providing detailed and tangible temperature and precipitation expectations.
Weather Evolution versus Net Result:
Climate outlooks often take a Net Result approach, forecasting the
entire Season as a whole. This procedure masks crucial intra-season
weather pattern changes (see FAQ). Furthermore, large portions
of the Nation are frequently not forecasted for at all when an analog
or climatology approach is used. Our ENSO Report breaks down the upcoming
Seasons into monthly increments, for all locations. This allows you
to see how the temperature patterns will evolve and gauge the
forecasted volatility.
Detailed versus Generic:
We commonly hear about climate computer models or analog forecasts
and what they are indicating for the upcoming Seasons. This can lead
to generic forecasts that have low resolution and large errors.
Instead, we incorporate dozens of factors, from the global level (El Niño/La Niña) to
the micro-scale, when we prepare our assessments. This is a more
thorough and lengthy procedure, but it yields the most detailed and
accurate results.
Current versus Out-Dated:
The traditional reference utilized when computing deviations from
normal is the 1971-2000 historical average, excluding the most recent
few years. Due to urbanization warming issues and climate regime
changes over the past decade, this is now an out-dated and
inappropriate reference average. We utilize a more contemporary average
as a reference standard for our temperature projections,
providing you with a more realistic outlook. In some cases the
different averages can be quite substantial. For additional information,
see our Historical Climate Data page.
Fact versus Fiction:
The reason our ENSO Report's forecasts are monthly projections is because Seasonal
forecasts can only be analyzed in monthly increments. There are
services that claim to forecast bi-monthly, weekly and even daily
weather out to several months into the future, but such claims are,
and always will be, scientifically invalid (see FAQ). Daily
weather forecasts lose validity beyond 10 days, and weekly or
bi-monthly forecasts lose validity beyond 1 month. In keeping with our goal for the highest scientific
integrity, our ENSO Report yields the greatest resolution capable by science.
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