Does the Pacific High Pressure Improve Summer Diving Visibility? The Data Says No
2026-03-11
Key Takeaways
- Pacific High pressure provides zero visibility benefit at Izu and Kii coast sites. IOP reads 11.9m regardless of pressure
- Kushimoto shows a reverse effect: post-frontal low-pressure days average 13.3m vs 11.1m in high-pressure conditions
- The real cause of summer low visibility is thermal stratification and phytoplankton blooms, not atmospheric pressure
Myth: Pacific High Pressure = Clear Summer Water
Japan's summer is dominated by the Pacific High, bringing hot, sunny, calm days. It sounds logical that this stable high pressure would produce crystal-clear diving conditions. Our data says otherwise — at least for Pacific-coast Japan.
We analyzed 46,000+ dive observations during July and August, grouped by pressure zone:
- Pacific High core (≥1012 hPa): high pressure firmly established
- Transition zone (1006–1011 hPa): typical summer coastal pressure
- Frontal/low (<1006 hPa): typhoon or frontal passage
July–August Visibility by Pressure Zone
| Site | Region | Low <1006 | Mid 1006-1011 | High ≥1012 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IOP (Izu) | Pacific coast | 11.9m | 12.0m | 11.9m |
| Kushimoto | Pacific coast (Kii) | 13.3m | 11.9m | 11.1m |
| Kerama | Okinawa | 19.2m | 21.7m | 21.8m |
| Ishigaki | Okinawa | 20.6m | 20.9m | 22.6m |
| Echizen | Sea of Japan | 8.8m | 9.6m | 9.7m |
| Tajiri | Sea of Japan | 12.4m | 11.7m | 10.9m |
- IOP (Izu): identical visibility in high and low pressure — both 11.9m
- Kushimoto: worse visibility in high pressure (11.1m) than low pressure (13.3m)
- Kerama/Ishigaki (Okinawa): slightly better in high pressure (+1–2m) — typhoon avoidance effect
- Echizen/Tajiri (Sea of Japan): marginal benefit from high pressure (+0.9m)
Why High Pressure Doesn't Help Pacific-Coast Sites
When the Pacific High is firmly established (≥1012 hPa), conditions are hot, calm, and sunny. These exact conditions promote strong thermal stratification in the surface layer:
- Solar heating raises sea surface temperature (SST reaches 25–28°C in summer Izu)
- Warm surface water sits stably above colder deep water — minimal vertical mixing
- Nutrients accumulate in the stratified surface layer
- Phytoplankton bloom, reducing visibility
Conversely, frontal systems (<1006 hPa) bring wind and waves that mechanically mix the water column. This can temporarily disperse phytoplankton — particularly evident at Kushimoto, where post-frontal conditions average 13.3m vs 11.1m during stable high-pressure spells.
Monthly Data: Pressure and Visibility Move Together — But Not Causally
| Month | IOP (Pacific) | Echizen (Sea of Japan) | Yonaguni (Oceanic) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pressure | Vis (m) | Pressure | Vis (m) | Pressure | Vis (m) | |
| Jan | 1015.8 | 18.6 | 1020.9 | 6.5 | 1015.0 | 22.4 |
| Feb | 1017.0 | 17.7 | 1023.4 | 6.6 | 1014.0 | 22.6 |
| Mar | 1015.2 | 13.7 | 1018.3 | 7.4 | 1011.5 | 23.5 |
| Apr | 1014.2 | 10.1 | 1016.3 | 7.6 | 1008.0 | 23.9 |
| May | 1012.9 | 10.6 | 1012.6 | 7.7 | 1004.9 | 24.2 |
| Jun | 1009.1 | 11.3 | 1009.2 | 8.3 | 1001.7 | 24.4 |
| Jul | 1009.8 | 11.6 | 1009.2 | 8.6 | 1001.7 | 25.6 |
| Aug | 1010.0 | 12.3 | 1009.8 | 10.3 | 1001.0 | 26.5 |
| Sep | 1013.8 | 12.7 | 1013.2 | 10.3 | 1004.0 | 27.3 |
| Oct | 1017.2 | 13.7 | 1018.2 | 8.7 | 1008.3 | 26.8 |
| Nov | 1017.7 | 14.7 | 1019.6 | 8.4 | 1012.1 | 24.4 |
| Dec | 1016.8 | 17.3 | 1016.2 | 5.0 | 1014.2 | 23.4 |
At IOP, the months with lowest pressure (summer, ~1010 hPa) coincide with the lowest visibility (11–12m), and highest pressure (winter, ~1017 hPa) with the highest visibility (17–18m). This looks like a clear pressure-visibility correlation — but it's a seasonal confound. Both are driven by the season: winter means cold, mixed water (high visibility); summer means warm, stratified water (low visibility). Pressure is merely a seasonal indicator, not the cause.
Yonaguni shows the opposite: summer has the lowest pressure (1001 hPa) but highest visibility (25–27m). Here, the Kuroshio's seasonal position drives visibility, with pressure effectively irrelevant.
Okinawa: High Pressure as Typhoon Shield
At Kerama and Ishigaki, high-pressure days show slightly better visibility (+1–2m vs typhoon-influenced days). The mechanism isn't that high pressure clears the water — it's that typhoons and fronts stir up sediment. High-pressure days simply avoid that disturbance.
Practical Advice
- Izu/Kii (Pacific): summer visibility is uniformly low regardless of pressure. Weather apps showing "high pressure" are not visibility indicators in summer. Watch for 1–2 days after a frontal passage (winds calm) for brief improvements.
- Sea of Japan (Echizen, Tajiri): stable high-pressure conditions provide marginal benefit (+0.9m). Summer Pacific High weather reduces storms and runoff.
- Okinawa (Kerama, Ishigaki): during typhoon season (July–September), check that you're in a high-pressure window before booking. High pressure means no typhoons, not clearer water per se.
Summary
- Pacific High (≥1012 hPa) in summer provides zero benefit to visibility at Pacific-coast Izu and Kii sites
- Kushimoto shows a reverse effect: post-frontal low-pressure days average 13.3m vs 11.1m in Pacific High conditions
- Okinawa sites show marginal improvement under high pressure (typhoon avoidance, not water clarity)
- The real driver of summer low visibility on Japan's Pacific coast is thermal stratification and phytoplankton blooms — not pressure
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