Impact of Asian Summer Monsoon on the 2021 Pacific Northwest Heatwave: Can It? Did It?
Geophysical Research Letters Wiley 52:18 (2025) e2025GL117205
Abstract:
Plain Language Summary: The Pacific Northwest (PNW) experienced a record鈥恇reaking heatwave during the summer of 2021, resulting in significant adverse effects on both human society and ecosystems. A heavy rainfall band was observed stretching from south China to south of Japan 1 week prior to the heatwave, fueling the debate over whether the monsoon activity contributed to this event. Our study found that while the monsoon activity typically has a cooling effect on the PNW's climate, in this particular year, it had a warming effect and thus contributed to this specific heatwave. This unusual warming effect was driven by a stronger and more northward鈥恠hifted Pacific jet stream, which altered the extratropical response to the monsoon, resulting in an anticyclonic pattern over the PNW instead of the typical cyclonic response seen under average climatic conditions. Therefore, it is important to distinguish between the general question of whether monsoon can influence such events on average, and the specific question of whether it did in any specific case. We argue that when discussing the influence of large鈥恠cale climate drivers on extremes, it is crucial to clearly state whether the focus is on the general potential for influence or on the specific role in a particular event.Climate Models Struggle to Simulate Observed North Pacific Jet Trends, Even Accounting for Tropical Pacific Sea Surface Temperature Trends
Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union (AGU) 52:4 (2025)
Drivers of the ECMWF SEAS5 seasonal forecast for the hot and dry European summer of 2022
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley (2024)
Abstract:
The European summer (June鈥揂ugust) 2022 was characterised by warm and dry anomalies across much of the continent, likely influenced by a northward鈥恠hifted jet stream. These general features were well predicted by European Centre for Medium鈥怰ange Weather Forecasts' system 5 seasonal forecast, initialised on May 1. Such successful predictions for European summers are relatively uncommon, particularly for atmospheric circulation. In this study, a set of hindcast experiments is employed to investigate the role that initialisation of the ocean, atmosphere, and land surface played in the 2022 forecast. We find that the trend from external forcing was the strongest contributor to the forecast near鈥恠urface temperature anomalies, with atmospheric circulation and land鈥恠urface interactions playing a secondary role. On the other hand, atmospheric circulation made a strong contribution to precipitation anomalies. Modelled Euro鈥怉tlantic circulation anomalies in 2022 were consistent with a La Ni帽a鈥恌orced teleconnection from the tropical Pacific. However, a northward jet trend in the model hindcasts with increasing greenhouse gas concentrations also contributed to the predicted circulation anomalies in 2022. In contrast, the observed linear trend in the jet over the past four decades was a southward shift, though it is unclear whether this trend was driven by external forcings or natural variability. Nevertheless, this case study demonstrates that important features of at least some European summers are predictable at the seasonal time鈥恠cale.Seasonal prediction of UK mean and extreme winds
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society Wiley 149:757 (2023) 3477-3489
North-West Europe hottest days are warming twice as fast as mean summer days
Geophysical Research Letters American Geophysical Union 50:10 (2023) e2023GL102757