The Caribbean Regional Climate Centre
Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology
Husbands
St. James
Barbados BB23006
CONTACT US
P.O. Box 130
Bridgetown
Barbados
Tel : +1 (246) 425 1362/3
Fax: +1 (246) 424 4733
Email: rcc@cimh.edu.bb
SPI Monitor September 2017
/in SPI Monitor /by Wayne DepradineSeptember 2017
Normal to above normal rainfall was experienced over the islands of the eastern Caribbean for September 2017. Trinidad, Tobago, St. Vincent, and St. Lucia were normal; Grenada slightly wet; Barbados very to extremely wet from south to north; Martinique slight to moderately wet; Dominica and Guadeloupe exceptionally wet; Antigua moderately wet; and St. Kitts very wet. Conditions in the Guianas ranged from moderately dry in the north to extremely wet in southern Suriname and western Guyana. Aruba and Curacao were normal. Conditions in Hispaniola ranged from slight to moderately dry in southern Haiti to exceptionally wet in most of the Dominican Republic; while Jamaica ranged from extremely wet in central areas to severely dry in the west. Grand Cayman was normal. Western Cuba was slightly dry to slightly wet, and eastern areas normal to exceptionally wet. Belize ranged from exceptionally dry in central areas to moderately dry in the south and moderately wet in the north.
July to September 2017
April to September 2017
October 2016 to September 2017
October 2015 to September 2017
Disclaimer
The information contained herein is provided with the understanding that The Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology makes no warranties, either expressed or implied, concerning the accuracy, completeness, reliability, or suitability of the Outlook. The information may be used freely by the public with appropriate acknowledgement of its source, but shall not be modified in content and then presented as original material.
The maps produced used SPI values calculated from monthly rainfall totals from land stations and NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data. Only land station data is used for the eastern Caribbean, described here as from Georgetown, Guyana in the south to Anguilla in the north. The Greater (and Western) Antilles is less represented by land stations. However efforts are being made to include more land stations from that part of the region. Note that the severity implied by the index is relative to what is normal for that period of consideration. Normal in the drier season reflects less rainfall than in the wetter season.
Temperature Outlook October 2017 to March 2018
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Precipitation Outlook /by Wayne DepradineOctober to December 2017
January to March 2018
Precipitation Outlook October 2017 to March 2018
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Precipitation Outlook /by Wayne DepradineTemperature Outlook September 2017 to February 2018
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Temperature Outlook /by Wayne DepradineSeptember to November 2017
December 2017 to February 2018
Precipitation Outlook September 2017 to February 2018
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Precipitation Outlook /by Wayne DepradineTemperature Outlook August 2017 to January 2018
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Temperature Outlook /by Wayne DepradineAugust to October 2017
November 2017 to January 2018
Precipitation Outlook August 2017 to January 2018
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Precipitation Outlook /by Wayne DepradineTemperature Outlook July to December 2017
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Temperature Outlook /by Wayne DepradineJuly to September 2017
October 2017 to December 2018
Temperature Outlook June to November 2017
/in CariCOF Climate Outlooks, Long Range Forecasts, Temperature Outlook /by Wayne DepradineJune to August 2017
September to November 2017