The marine heatwave bulletin provides forecasts and analysis of marine heatwave events across the globe and throughout the year. Used datasets include observations (satellite sea surface temperature maps) to numerical model analyses (assimilating satellite and in situ observations) and derive marine heatwave forecasts for a 10 day period.[1]
Forecasts for 16 November
Mercator Ocean International (MOi) forecasts were derived using as comparision the marine heatwave situation on the 5th November 2024.
Global Ocean
Category | Geographical Extent | |
North Altantic | ||
North Tropical Atlantic | ||
South Tropical Atlantic | ||
Southern Ocean (30°E and 75°E) | ||
Tropical Pacific | ||
North Pacific | ||
South East Asian Seas | ||
South Pacific | ||
Indian Ocean |
Europe Zone
Category | Geographical Extent | |
Mediterranean Sea | ||
Bay of Biscay, Baltic and North Sea |
Weekly temperature anomalies
for the week 10 -16 November 2024
Atlantic Ocean | North -1°C to 3°C | North Tropical 0°C to 2°C | South Tropical 0°C to 2°C | |
Southern Ocean | -1°C to 3°C | |||
Pacific Ocean | North -0.5°C to 3°C | Tropical -2°C to 1°C | South -1°C to 1°C | South-East Asian Seas 0.5°C to 1.5°C |
Indian Ocean | 0.5°C to 2°C | |||
Europe zone | 0.5°C à 3°C |
Access the Daily Global Physical Bulletin for a 9-day forecast here.
What are marine heatwaves?
Marine heatwaves (MHW) are extreme rises in ocean temperature for an extended period of time. They can occur at different locations in the ocean, and their magnitude and frequency have increased over the last couple of decades, with harmful impacts on ecosystems, and human activities. According to the latest report released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC AR6 SYR), it is found with high confidence that in the near-term at 1.5°C global warming, the increasing frequency of marine heatwaves will increase risks of biodiversity loss in the oceans, including from mass mortality events.[2]
How are marine heatwaves calculated?
A marine heatwave is an episode during which the ocean temperature is abnormally warm for at least 5 consecutive days.
Figure adapted from Hobday et al. (2018)
For any location in the ocean, the normal temperatures are defined for every day of the year using a climatological period (here 1993–2016). A heatwave is identified when the measured daily temperature is within the top 10% of the highest recorded values for that day (i.e., above the 90th percentile, see diagram), and with this condition persisting for at least five consecutive days.
The intensity of the heatwave on any given day is measured as the number of degrees above the climatological average (represented by the bold black line) indicated by the blue arrow. We can either calculate the cumulative intensity over the entire heatwave or record the maximum intensity.
Heatwaves are classified based on their intensity level. To do this, the intensity is compared to the difference between the climatological value and the 90th percentile value. A mhw intensity between 1 and 2 times this difference corresponds to a heatwave of moderate category; between 2 and 3 times, to a strong category; between 3 and 4 times, to a severe category; and a difference greater than 4 times corresponds to an extreme category.
[1] Analysis of datasets: SST OSTIA (Copernicus Marine Service), OISST (NOAA), GLO12 (Copernicus Marine Service / Mercator Ocean International), PSY4 (Copernicus Marine Service / Mercator Ocean International), and GLO12 et PSY4 forecasts.
[2] IPCC AR6 SYR chapter 4.3 https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/syr/downloads/report/IPCC_AR6_SYR_LongerReport.pdf