Dr. Jeff Masters' WunderBlog

Clouds, unstable Loop Current making oil spill prediction difficult
Posted by: Dr. Jeff Masters, 08:48 PM GMT del 18 Maggio 2010 +4
It's cloudy over the Gulf of Mexico today, so it is difficult to tell how far into the Loop Current the Deepwater Horizon oil has penetrated using visible satellite imagery. Satellite imagery yesterday from NASA's MODIS instrument confirmed that a tongue of oil moved southeast from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and entered the Gulf of Mexico's Loop Current. However, Synthetic Aperture Radar imagery from the European Envisat satellite posted at ROFFS Ocean Forecasting Service shows that while some of the tongue of oil that entered the Loop Current appears to be circulating southwards towards the Florida Keys, perhaps 80% of the oil in this tongue is caught in a counter-clockwise circulating eddy along the north side of the Loop Current. This oil may eventually circulate around and enter the Loop Current, but not for at least three days.


Figure 1. Oil spill forecast for this Thursday night as simulated by the 6pm EDT Monday May 17 runs of the Navy Gulf of Mexico HYCOM nowcast/forecast system and the Global HYCOM + NCODA Analysis from the HYCOM Consortium. See the University of South Florida Ocean Circulation Group website for more information. There are considerable differences between the two models, due in part to the fact that they have much different depictions of the sea surface temperatures (SSTs) and ocean currents at the beginning of their runs. The warm Loop Current is visible as the red colors of the SST field that form a heart-shaped area in the Gulf.

How long will it be until oil reaches the Keys?
Once oil gets into the Loop Current, the 1 - 2 mph speed of the current should allow the oil to travel the 500 miles to the Florida Keys in 5 - 10 days. Portions of the Loop Current flow at speed up to 4 mph, so the fastest transport could be 4 - 5 days.

How much oil has made it into the Loop Current?
According to the latest trajectory forecasts from NOAA, the tongue of oil flowing southwards has, at most, "light" concentrations. The oil will grow more dilute as it travels the 500 miles to the Florida Keys, and most of the oil appears to be caught in a smaller counter-clockwise rotating eddy on the north side of the Loop Current. My present expectation is that the oil entering the Loop Current this week will cause only minor problems in the Keys next week. However, there is a lot of uncertainty regarding how much oil will get to the Keys, and we cannot rule out the possibility of an ecological disaster in the fragile Keys ecosystem.

How is the Loop Current changing?
The Loop Current has been highly chaotic and unstable over the past week, making it difficult to predict how the ocean currents near the spill will behave. According to ROFFS Ocean Fishing Service, which has done a tremendous job tracking the spill, the Loop Current surged 7 - 10 miles northward Sunday and Monday. The Loop Current has gotten more contorted since Friday, and may be ready to cut off into a clockwise-rotating Loop Current Eddy. This process occurs every 6 - 11 months, with the clockwise-rotating ring of water slowly drifting west-southwest towards Texas. The last eddy broke off ten months ago, so the Loop Current is due to shed another eddy in the next few months. The latest 1-month forecast from the U.S. Navy does not predict an eddy forming, but these forecasts are not very reliable. If a Loop Current Eddy does break off, oil getting entrained into it might orbit the center of the Gulf of Mexico for many months inside the eddy. However, this eddy will probably reattach and detach from the main Loop Current flow for at least a month following when it breaks off, so oil will continue to flow through the Keys during this initial month.

When will the flow of oil into the Loop Current shut off?
Winds over the oil spill location are expected to be light and onshore at 5 - 10 knots through Saturday. This means that the chaotic contortions of the Loop Current will primarily control how much oil gets into it, making it difficult to predict when the flow will shut off. The long range (and thus unreliable) forecast for next week from the GFS model calls for a continuation of light winds over the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Thus, the flow of oil into the Loop Current could occur intermittently for several weeks.

Who besides the Keys are at risk next week from the Loop Current oil?
As I discussed in an earlier post, the coast of Southwest Florida from Tampa Bay to the Everglades is a "Forbidden Zone" for surface-based transport of ocean water to the coast, and is probably not at risk from this week's Loop Current oil. The northwest coast of Cuba east of Havana and the coast of Southeast Florida from the Keys to West Palm Beach are at the most risk. The western shores of the western-most Bahama Islands and the U.S. coast north of West Palm Beach northwards to Cape Hatteras are at slight risk. It would likely take ocean eddies 2 - 9 weeks to transport the oil to these locations, and the oil would probably be so dilute that ecosystem damage would probably be minor, at most. At this point, I see no reason for cancellation of vacation plans to any of the beach areas that may potentially be affected by the oil.

What is happening to the plumes of oil at depth?
Two research missions over the past week have detected substantial plumes of oil at depth, moving to the southwest. The deepest of the these plumes, near the site of the blowout at 5,000 feet depth, is in a region of slow ocean currents and has not moved much. At depths closer to the surface, the currents get stronger, and oil within a few hundred feet of the surface--if there is any--could potentially have been dragged into the Loop Current. At this point, we don't have a very good picture of how much oil is at depth and where it might be headed.

Oil spill resources
My post on the Southwest Florida "Forbidden Zone" where surface oil will rarely go
My post on what oil might do to a hurricane
NOAA trajectory forecasts
Deepwater Horizon Unified Command web site
Oil Spill Academic Task Force
University of South Florida Ocean Circulation Group oil spill forecasts
ROFFS Deepwater Horizon page
Surface current forecasts from NOAA's HYCOM model
HYCOM ocean current forecasts from LSU

The tropics
For those of you interested in a detailed look at the early season tropical weather outlook, consult the excellent wunderblogs of StormW and Weather456, who are now featured bloggers for the coming hurricane season. We have some models predicting a possible subtropical storm off the U.S. East coast next week, but this does not appear to be a significant concern for land areas at this time. More concerning is the possibility that an area of disturbed weather will develop across the Western Caribbean late next week. While wind shear will likely keep anything in the Western Caribbean from developing, several models are predicting that this disturbance may bring major flooding rains to earthquake-ravaged Haiti late next week.

I'll be back with a new post Wednesday afternoon.

Jeff Masters
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1201. MiamiHurricanes09 08:09 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting CybrTeddy:


What do you think about what the GFS, ECMWF, and the CMC is predicting? Pretty interesting, however I doubt imo we'll see TWO storms before May. I think the Caribbean system bears most watching.. the Caribbean water is equal of that you'd see in July.

Check this out.

TCHP May 18th, 2010.


May 18th, 2009. (featured a sole Category 2 in November)


May 17th, 2008. (Featured 3 Major hurricanes in the Caribbean, Gustav, Omar, and Paloma)


May 18th, 2007. (featured 2 Category 5 Hurricanes within weeks of each other in the Caribbean.. both as you know made landfall at that intensity.)


May 18th, 2006 (featured a sole Category 1 Hurricane, Ernesto)


May 18th, 2005 (you've heard the story before)

I disagree. Why? The system in the south Caribbean will get ripped apart(because of shear). Although the hybrid system will not affect any land unless the ECMWF is right, I think that it'll (the hybrid one) be the stronger of the two. And BTW, I think that the Euro will probably be right as it usually has a good handle on these types of scenarios.
Member Since: Settembre 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
1202. Floodman 08:10 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting Baybuddy:
I enjoy this blog, but feel that it should be an apolitical (sp?) forum. We all share an intrest in the weather, and there are plenty of blogs out there that talk politics, so lets try to stay on topic.


Well said...now in practice, it may be a different story, but that's what the Ignore button is for
Member Since: Agosto 2, 2006 Posts: 10 Comments: 9919
1203. Levi32 08:10 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting Hurricanes101:
1887 had a storm form on May 15th and May 17th

1 Tropical Storm #1 15-20 MAY 60
2 Tropical Storm #2 17-21 MAY 50


oddly enough, 1st storm formed south of Bermuda went north and northeast and clipped Newfoundland. The 2nd storm formed south of Jamaica, moved north over Jamaica, hit Eastern Cuba and the Bahamas before dying out

1887 had 19 storms, 11 hurricanes and 2 recorded major hurricanes. The 3rd storm of 1887 formed on June 11th

I will look for other instances


Wow, definitely dejavu. Thanks for digging that up.
Member Since: novembre 24, 2005 Posts: 586 Comments: 25456
1204. MiamiHurricanes09 08:11 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting extreme236:


I agree that two storms would seem unlikely...I guess there is a small chance for it to happen. I'd say the possible subtropical storm is most likely to occur if I had to pick one.
Me too.
Member Since: Settembre 2, 2009 Posts: 129 Comments: 19976
1205. Levi32 08:12 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting Weather456:


Talk about dejavu.

1887 is also the third most active hurricane season with 19 storms. tied with 1995


And...check out the congregation of tracks to the west that year. Even without the unobserved storms in the eastern Atlantic, which were undoubtedly there, this looks very similar to the overall pattern I think is shaping up this year.

Member Since: novembre 24, 2005 Posts: 586 Comments: 25456
1206. Cavin Rawlins 08:14 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
I had not seen this 12Z NOGAPS 168 hrs, really agressive south of Hispaniola

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1207. AussieStorm 08:15 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
PSSSST... NEW BLOG
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1208. Hurricanes101 08:15 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
To go further 5 storms made direct landfall on the US that season

Storm 3 made landfall in Mississippi on June 13th as a TS

Storm 4 made landfall in West Florida on July 27th as a Hurricane

Storm 9 made landfall near Brownsville, TX on September 21st as a Hurricane

Storm 13 made 2 landfalls; 1st in southern LA on October 18th and 2nd in Mississippi as a TS on the 19th

Storm 16 made landfall just north of Tampa, FL on October 29th as a TS
Member Since: Marzo 10, 2010 Posts: 1 Comments: 6902
1209. MiamiHurricanes09 08:15 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting Levi32:


And...check out the congregation of tracks to the west that year. Even without the unobserved storms in the eastern Atlantic, which were undoubtedly there, this looks very similar to the overall pattern I think is shaping up this year.

Yeah but I doubt we will see so many system curving out to sea.
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1210. pottery 08:16 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting SomeRandomTexan:
SAINTSHURIFAN wasn't trying to get in anyones business.. What he was saying is true. If someone is to make a comment about anything pro conservative they get blasted, Poofed and all sorts of things.

We should keep politics out of the discussion. This is a weather blog and it should be kept that way!!!!

Perhaps it is the WAY that people say things. I dont think that anyone has the right to come in here and blast away at the majority. And then to proceed to lecture on theology, rights, and personal choice.
I personnaly object to that.
This blog is a unique place with people from all around the world here. Talking WEATHER.
Keep it so, or stay away.
Member Since: Ottobre 24, 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 20708
1211. Hurricanes101 08:16 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting Levi32:


And...check out the congregation of tracks to the west that year. Even without the unobserved storms in the eastern Atlantic, which were undoubtedly there, this looks very similar to the overall pattern I think is shaping up this year.



I might have inadvertently stumbled upon a new analog year for 2010 lol
Member Since: Marzo 10, 2010 Posts: 1 Comments: 6902
1212. xcool 08:17 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    


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1213. CaribBoy 08:17 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting Floodman:
Note the date for this storm...I believe this the proverbial "earliest storm" everyone talks about:



Just incredibe for march (100MPH Cat 2) plus in the eastern carib.
Member Since: Ottobre 6, 2007 Posts: 0 Comments: 2853
1214. Floodman 08:17 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting SAINTHURRIFAN:
i think flood a point a lot of people do not realize is the affects a tropical system in the gulf would have on the oil spill. a hurricane as we all know will pick up the seawater in this case mixed with oil and throw it into the inland bays rivers and esctutaires. in my opinion worse case senario would be a storm that took a track like george, through the keys, into the eastern gulf on a nw course to landfall on the north central gulf coast. with the various changes in wind direction with surge and waves would be catostrophic.


On the surface it would certainly seem that way...and given the sheer volume of oil in the GOM right now, I would have to lean that way, but there is some debate going on right now as to what form the spill would take, given a Hurricane in the GOM, of whatever track.

Best case scenario? The main effected oil would have weathered and taken the form of "tarballs" (man, am I tired for saying that over and over) and simply cover the beach in a more easily dealt with form...the other option is too insane to even contemplate...a couple of million gallons of oil spread on the beach like molasses from say Biloxi to Fort Walton Beach. You're looking at several billion in that clean up alone, and that would only be for the beaches

Okay, one lone political comment here: congress needs to get off it's a$$ and raise the stakes for the oil companies...after the bill comes due is too late
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1216. xcool 08:19 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
i'm very close to mississippi gulf coast ...
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1217. CaneWarning 08:19 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
I wish they'd shut down all drilling in the gulf. It isn't worth it. I guess we won't realize that until the Gulf of Mexico is devoid of life and our beaches are covered in oil.
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1218. Floodman 08:19 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
NEW BLOG
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1219. xcool 08:21 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
oh new blog
Member Since: Settembre 26, 2009 Posts: 2 Comments: 15503
1220. hydrus 09:13 PM GMT del 19 Maggio 2010    
Quoting Floodman:
NEW BLOG
I posted it on your March 17 blog. Why, I have no idea. I thought it worth mentioning, that disturbance being detected by the models in the Caribbean Sea would be very near or over that very warm pool of water showing up on the water temperature map.
Member Since: Settembre 27, 2007 Posts: 1 Comments: 14303

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About JeffMasters
Jeff co-founded the Weather Underground in 1995 while working on his Ph.D. He flew with the NOAA Hurricane Hunters from 1986-1990.

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