Precipitation and Temperature: May precipitation was between record driest and near average in most of Arizona and between below average and above average in most of New Mexico (Fig. 1a). May temperatures were above average in Arizona and between average and much above average in most of New Mexico (Fig. 1b). Spring precipitation ranks (Mar-May) were below average to record driest across most of the Southwest, with a few pockets of average to above-average (Fig. 2a). Temperature ranks for the same period were above average across most of the Southwest (Fig. 2b). 2021 (Jan - May) temperature averages and precipitation reveal a similar pattern (Fig. 3a-b).
Drought: Water year precipitation (as of May 31, 2021) is between below normal and record driest across most of the Southwest (Fig. 4). The U.S. Drought Monitor (USDM) intensified drought categorizations across the Southwest since the May climate outlook (Fig. 5). Most of the region was already characterized as experiencing drought, but these changes expanded the areas under D3 (Extreme Drought) and D4 (Exceptional Drought), and the scale simply does not go any drier.
Water Supply: Snowpack is dwindling, and the latest streamflow forecasts were generally below the 1981-2010 median for the higher elevation regions that feed into streams over summer (see the NRCS website for details). Most of the reservoirs in the region are at or below the values recorded at this time last year. Most are below their long-term average (see Arizona and New Mexico reservoir storage).
Wildfire: Wildfire season saw a rapid surge of activity, particularly in Arizona (Fig. 6). The Telegraph/Mescal complex fire is notable in size and duration, with waves of closures and evacuations. The National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) significant wildland fire potential outlooks call for normal wildfire risk across Arizona and New Mexico in July. This leans on monsoon precipitation tamping down risk. Until those rains begin, there are increased opportunities for ignition in the Southwest with the potential for dry lightning.
ENSO Tracker: La Niña conditions are over, with outlooks and forecasts reverting to ENSO-neutral (for now). The long-term forecasts see a possible return to La Niña conditions this winter, but it will be a wait-and-see situation over much of summer (see ENSO-tracker for details).
Precipitation and Temperature Forecast: The three-month outlook for July through September calls for increased chances for above-normal precipitation across much of the Arizona, and a large swath of increased chances for below-normal precipitation in New Mexico (Fig. 7, top). The three-month temperature outlook calls for equal chances of above- or below-normal temperatures across much of the southwestern U.S. and portions of northern Mexico (Fig. 7, bottom).