❄️ 30 Seasons of ENSO + Satellite Data

JAPOW FORECAST Japan Powder Snow Prediction for Skiers & Riders

30 years of data prove it: the Pacific Ocean predicts Japan's snow.
We turn climate science into actionable trip-planning intel.

30Seasons Analyzed
r=0.74ENSO-Snow Link
4Resorts Tracked
+90cmLa Niña Bonus
// 2025-26 winter forecast

This Season's Outlook

Autumn 2025 ONI: -0.5 — Weak La Niña fading to Neutral

Based on ONI-Snow regression (30 seasons). Updated when new data arrives.

Myoko Kogen

Niigata · Japan Sea side · Heavy snow zone
Predicted Peak Depth
193cm
🎿 Above Average (+11%)
30yr Average
174cm
La Niña Avg
225cm
El Niño Avg
121cm
Model r
-0.775
🎯 What this means for you: Japan's snowiest tracked resort. La Niña years average nearly double El Niño years here. Book early — this is a powder hunter's pick.

Nozawa Onsen

Nagano · Traditional hot spring village
Predicted Peak Depth
165cm
🎿 Above Average (+11%)
30yr Average
149cm
La Niña Avg
195cm
El Niño Avg
105cm
Model r
-0.757
🎯 What this means for you: Great snow reliability with onsen culture. +90cm swing between La Niña and El Niño years. A strong pick for a well-rounded Japan ski trip.

Niseko United

Hokkaido · World-famous powder
Predicted Peak Depth
203cm
📊 Average (+5%)
30yr Average
193cm
La Niña Avg
220cm
El Niño Avg
159cm
Model r
-0.739
🎯 What this means for you: Niseko delivers even in average years. The ENSO swing is smaller here (+61cm) because Hokkaido gets cold regardless. A safe bet any season.

Hakuba Valley

Nagano · Olympic heritage · Closest to Tokyo
Predicted Peak Depth
95cm
📊 Average (+9%)
30yr Average
87cm
La Niña Avg
108cm
El Niño Avg
69cm
Model r
-0.692
🎯 What this means for you: Base depths are lower but the terrain variety is unmatched. Combine with a Myoko or Nozawa side trip for maximum powder coverage.
🎿 Bottom Line

With autumn ONI at -0.5, this season leans slightly snow-positive. Myoko and Nozawa are the top picks for powder hunters — they show the strongest ENSO response. Niseko is a reliable fallback. If you're deciding between Japan and another destination this winter, the data says: go to Japan.

// the science

La Niña = Japow Jackpot

When the autumn ENSO index dips negative (La Niña), cold Siberian air masses push harder across the Sea of Japan, picking up moisture and dumping it as snow on Japan's mountains. 30 seasons of data confirm the pattern:

What is La Niña?

A climate pattern where the central-eastern Pacific Ocean cools below normal (ONI ≤ -0.5°C). This strengthens the winter monsoon over East Asia, pushing cold, moist air across the Sea of Japan — resulting in heavier snowfall on Japan's western mountains.

What is El Niño?

The opposite pattern: the Pacific warms above normal (ONI ≥ +0.5°C). This weakens the winter monsoon, leading to milder winters in Japan with less snowfall — particularly on the Sea of Japan side where most ski resorts are located.

La Niña Winters

ONI ≤ -0.5 · 14 of 30 seasons
225cm
Myoko average peak depth
vs

El Niño Winters

ONI ≥ +0.5 · 8 of 30 seasons
121cm
Myoko average peak depth
+104cm
La Niña winters bring nearly double the snow at Myoko
🌊 What does this mean for trip planning?

Check the autumn ONI before booking. If it's below -0.5 in October, expect an above-average snow season on Japan's Sea of Japan side (Myoko, Nozawa, Hakuba). If it's above +0.5, temper your expectations — or choose Niseko, which is more ENSO-resilient. The correlation is strongest at Myoko (r = -0.775) and weakest at Hakuba (r = -0.692).

Snow by ENSO Phase — All 4 Resorts (30 Seasons)

❄️ A Note on Snow Quality vs Quantity

More snow doesn't always mean better skiing. What makes Japan's powder legendary — the "Japow" — is its exceptionally low moisture content. This happens when snow falls at temperatures below -5°C, creating dry, light crystals that float rather than pack.

La Niña winters tend to be both snowier and colder — a combination that favors high-quality powder. El Niño winters often bring warmer storms with heavier, wetter snow. So the ENSO signal predicts not just how much snow, but how good it will be.

In our data, La Niña winters average 2–3°C colder than El Niño winters across all four resorts. Colder = drier = better powder.

// full dataset

30 Seasons of Records

Every season, every number. The data speaks for itself.

SeasonONIPhaseHakubaNisekoMyokoNozawa
// model performance

How Accurate Is This?

ResortCorrelation (r)CV-R² (10yr)CV-R² (30yr)CV-MAE
Myoko Kogen-0.7750.3910.55629cm
Nozawa Onsen-0.7570.3160.52527cm
Niseko United-0.7390.3370.49221cm
Hakuba Valley-0.6920.3100.42615cm
📊 How to read this

Correlation (r): How strongly autumn ONI predicts winter snow. -0.775 means a strong inverse relationship — lower ONI = more snow.
CV-R²: How much of the year-to-year variation the model explains, tested on data it hasn't seen. The jump from 10yr to 30yr shows the model gets more reliable with more data — not less.
CV-MAE: Average prediction error. Hakuba's 15cm error on a ~90cm average is remarkably tight.

// how it works

Methodology

01
🌊

ENSO Index

NOAA's Oceanic Niño Index measures Pacific sea surface temperature anomalies. Autumn (Sep-Nov) ONI is used as the primary predictor — it's known months before ski season starts.

02
📐

30-Year Regression

Linear regression of ONI vs max snow depth at AMEDAS stations near each resort. Leave-one-out cross-validation ensures the model isn't overfitting to noise.

03
🛰️

Satellite Verification

ESA Sentinel-2 NDSI (Normalized Difference Snow Index) confirms satellite-observed snow cover matches ground data (r = +0.65 to +0.81 across resorts).

04
📡

Season Updates

Pre-season forecast issued in October/November when ONI stabilizes. During the season, satellite NDSI provides weekly snow coverage updates for real-time tracking.