My take on the models at the moment is that there is fairly good cross model agreement on what happens out to T150 (0z on Christmas Day). Beyond that we are getting a multitude of different solutions with no consensus at all really. So it really is impossible to say what might happen beyond Christmas Day at the moment.
The general synoptic situation at 0z on 25 Dec sees the UK in a run of cool north to north-westerly winds as low pressure moves east across Scandinavia. Pressure is high over Greenland and also over Portugal with low pressure to the west of the Azores. The following describes the evolution from this point for the various models.
GFS 18z http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gfs/runs/2014121818/gfs-0-150.png?18
A fairly active low pressure area to the wet of the Azores is already showing signs of drifting north which it does gradually forcing the high pressure over Portugal to drift NE towards the SE of England. The low then elongates east to the north of the UK over the top of the high pressure bringing in a mild S/SW flow. The Atlantic then takes over in low res.
GFS 18Z P http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gfsp/runs/2014121818/gfs-0-150.png?18
Very similar evolution to the 18z op run out to T192
http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gfsp/runs/2014121818/gfs-0-192.png?18
Beyond that a ridge does develop temporarily again from Greenland to Portugal allowing some very cold air to flood south over the UK for a time
http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gfsp/runs/2014121818/gfs-0-252.png?18
http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gfsp/runs/2014121818/gfs-0-288.png?18
Eventually the Atlantic express rolls back in
ECM 12z http://www.meteociel.fr/modeles/ecmwf/runs/2014121812/ECM1-168.GIF?18-0
ECM has a little area of low pressure just to the west of Iceland at T150 which is different to GFS. This suddenly develops into a complex and deep system of low pressure within the following 48 hours bringing mild south westerly winds to the UK. This seems a somewhat unusual evolution. The low to the west of the Azores stays put and fails to engage with the low developing to the south of Iceland.
http://www.meteociel.fr/modeles/ecmwf/runs/2014121812/ECM1-216.GIF?18-0
By the end of the run the Greenland high is ridging strongly SE towards the Azores and the main low is sinking south east to the west of Ireland. If the ECM ran on for a couple more days we might find the UK ends up in a run of N or NE winds. So the run is not without interest but I am not convinced by the evolution it shows.
GEFS 18z Control http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gens/run/gens-0-1-150.png?18
Also has a small low close to Iceland at T150 similar to ECM. Unlike ECM this low moves east but does still result in a SW flow over the UK by T180 http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gens/run/gens-0-1-180.png?18
Beyond that it looks like the next area of low pressure will try to move in from the Atlantic.
GEM 12z http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gem/runs/2014121812/gem-0-156.png?12
The low to the west of the Azores remains in situ due to the jet stream in the vicinity diving south east. The pressure patterns remain locked in place with little change out to T240 and the UK remaining in a cold northerly airstream. Low pressure remains blocked off the Canadian Maritimes.
http://modeles.meteociel.fr/modeles/gem/runs/2014121812/gem-0-240.png?12
So a real mixed bag of options beyond Christmas Day offering anything from mild south westerlies to potentially a very cold spell for at least a time. That says to me that everything beyond T150 at the moment is FI and pure speculation.
Originally Posted by: Global Warming