The past few months have seen the strongest La Niña signal since the winter of 2010-2011. So, the question is whether this spring continues to mirror that year, which ended up the costliest on record for tornadoes and the deadliest in nearly 100 years.
“Severe weather season is really a collection of several short weather events, and anticipating individual events at long lead times is usually tricky,” Sam Lillo, atmospheric researcher at the University of Colorado Boulder, told CNN.
“What we can say instead is whether the probability of the ingredients coming together for these events is higher or lower than normal: This year, it is higher than normal.”
The deadliest tornado season in modern history
The remarkable tornado season of 2011 was the deadliest in modern times, with over 550 fatalities — second only to 1925’s total of 794 tornado deaths.
“Looking back on 2011, it was the sheer magnitude of the number of events, the fact that so many hit populated areas and, of course, the incredibly high toll in terms of deaths, injuries and dollar damage,” said Bill Bunting, chief of forecast operations for the National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center (SPC).
While localized and small-scale weather features played roles in setting up both of these tragic days, the overall large-scale weather patterns that fed into the historic 2011 tornado season are worth looking at to determine the risk for similar days this year.
“Every year has some potential (of tornado outbreaks); it’s just a matter of trying to accurately predict, with as much lead time as possible, where that area is likely to be and then making sure that people are prepared and have a plan,” Bunting said.
Active forecast for this spring
Lillo’s model recently predicted — with a month of lead time — the Arctic outbreak that gripped the central US this February. Now, the focus shifts to what these long-term patterns could reveal as we head into the spring severe storm season.
During La Niña, stronger temperature differences tend to develop between hot and humid air in the southern US and cooler, drier air to the north. This sets up a faster jet stream that can drive severe weather outbreaks.
“The faster jet stream holds all the potential for stronger storm systems and severe weather,” Lillo said.
In March, the southern US is historically the area where severe storms, including tornadoes, are more likely. Then, as the Northern Hemisphere begins to warm, the bull’s-eye for tornadoes will shift west into the central US and eventually north into the northern Plains, come summer.
“The jet stream pattern is not unfavorable for severe weather as we get a little bit later into March and certainly beyond,” Bunting said. “If that pattern holds, very strong wind fields down across the Gulf Coast in proximity to warm, moist air suggest that the Gulf Coast in the near-term may be an area to watch closely.”
How La Niña relates to tornadoes
Similar to this year, a moderate La Niña was the main feature in 2011. La Niña, and its counterpart, El Niño, can play a significant role in the position of the jet stream, temperature and precipitation patterns over the US, which all play a role in the formation of severe weather.
“The flow of warm, humid air from the Gulf of Mexico increases in strength during springs that follow La Niña, which produces the fuel needed to form storms,” Jason Furtado, assistant professor of meteorology at the University of Oklahoma, said.
“The stronger flow increases the low-level wind shear that also favors the formation of tornadoes and hailstorms.”
The time to prepare is now
While severe storms occur year-round in the US, the peak time for severe storm outbreaks is during meteorological spring, which includes March, April and May.
But it’s not just tornado reports that are down. Hail and damaging wind reports are also below average so far this year.
“There have been many seasons that have started out quiet and did just the opposite,” Bunting said.
The upcoming forecast relies on where the jet stream will end up in the coming weeks.
Advised Bunting: “This is the time of year where we need to start thinking a bit more about the potential for severe storms and developing that pre-event planning.”