Rainfall Shortage Sequence 03/2019

Sequence of raiinfall shortages to March 2019

By March 2019, extreme shortages of rainfall occur at durations from 12 months to 30 months.

This contour plot shows the progress of the drought at Manilla up to March 2019. Colours show rainfall shortages as percentiles. Dates plot along the top, and durations down the side.

One month rainfall totals (on the top row)

By March 2019, there had been eight months without serious monthly rainfall shortages. The months of serious rainfall shortage (light brown) were earlier, in May, June and July 2018. The only other month in the last two years with such low rainfall was September 2017.

Shortages lasting less than one year (rows 2 to 9)

As the effects of low monthly rainfall added up, extreme shortages appeared (dark brown). That is, rainfall totals in the lowest 1% of the historical record.
By June 2018, the 2-month and 3-month totals were already extreme shortages. Similarly, by July, the 3-month, 4-month, and 5-month totals were all extreme shortages. By September 2018, extreme shortages extended as far as 9-month totals. That total, adding up the nine months from January to September 2018, included only one month (February) that had rainfall above normal.
In these shorter durations, extreme shortages were rare after September 2018. The final month plotted (March) includes no shortages (not even “serious” ones) for durations from 2 months up to 6 months.

Shortages of 1-year to 3-year duration (rows 12 to 36)

By August 2018, an extreme 15-month shortage appeared. The 15-month total then included not only the dry months of winter 2018, but also the dry month of September 2017. By September 2018, the 15-month total became the driest on record (400 mm). By October four totals in this group (12-, 15-, 18-, and 24-month totals) were extreme shortages. That was true again in January 2019. By that time, some dry months in 2017 were excluded, but dry months in the 2018-19 summer were included.
In February 2019, as the four extreme shortages of the previous month persisted, the 12-month total became the driest on record (271 mm). March also had four extreme shortages in this group, but now they were at 12, 15, 24 and 30 months. The 24-month total (769 mm) was the second-driest on record and the 30-month total (1078 mm) equal driest.

A related graph

A line graph of the rainfall status for March 2019  extends to durations much longer than the 36 months shown in this contour graph. It reveals that extreme shortages exist at durations of six years and seven years.


Data and method

This kind of graph simply displays the time sequence, month by month, of rainfall shortages that I have displayed on line graphs prepared for each month. In the post for the most recent line graph (March 2019) I have described my method of analysis and its limitations.

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