Talking about conditions in New Zealand, we have been having a drought (that came earlier than normal). If there is going to be an el-Nino through our autumn and winter, how does that bode for next summer Down-Under?
After Much Ado, El Niño Officially Declared
5
March, 2015
Animation of subsurface temperature anomalies in the tropical Pacific Ocean.
Credit: NOAA.
Credit: NOAA.
Just
when everyone had pretty much written
it off,
the El Niño event that has been nearly a year in the offing finally
emerged in February and could last through the spring and summer, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced
Thursday.
This
isn’t the blockbuster, 1998 repeat El Niño many anticipated when
the first hints of an impending event emerged about a year ago. This
El Niño has just crept across the official threshold, so it
won’t be a strong event.
“We’re
basically declaring El Niño,” NOAA forecaster Michelle L’Heureux
said. “It’s unfortunate we can’t declare a weak El Niño.”
In
part because of its weakness, as well as its unusual timing, the El
Niño isn’t expected to have much impact on U.S. weather patterns,
nor bring much relief for drought-stricken California.
But
forecasters say it could nudge weather patterns in other areas of the
globe, especially if it persists or intensifies, and could boost
global temperatures — following a 2014 that was already the hottest
year on record.
But
forecasters say it could nudge weather patterns in other areas of the
globe, especially if it persists or intensifies, and could boost
global temperatures — following a 2014 that was already the hottest
year on record.
“It
does tilt the odds toward warmth,” L’Heureux said.
The
Difference a Year Makes
Forecasters
with NOAA’s
Climate Prediction Center and
the International
Research Institute for Climate and Society(IRI)
at Columbia University first raised
the alert early
last year that an El Niño might be taking shape. They based it on a
subsurface plume of warm water, called a Kelvin wave, surging from
west to east across the tropical Pacific. (It was this large plume
that drew comparisons to the monster El Niño of 1998, which caused
deluges and flooding in many parts of the world and significantly
amped up global temperatures. 1998 is still the only 20th century
year among the top 10 warmest.)
An
El Niño is marked by unusually warm waters over the central and
eastern parts of this basin. The CPC officially considers it an event
when the sea surface temperatures in a key region of the ocean reach
at least 0.5°C, or about 1°F, warmer than average.
Multiple
Kelvin waves have pulsed across the ocean basin in recent months and
ocean temperatures have repeatedly been warm enough in that region to
qualify as an El Niño.
But
ocean temperatures alone don’t define an El Niño; CPC forecasters
also look for the corresponding shifts in atmospheric patterns,
namely a weakening of the typical east-to-west trade winds over the
region. Those altered winds can affect weather around the globe.
That’s why they are watched
so carefully month after month.
The climate impacts typically associated with an El Niño during the months of June, July, and August.
Credit: NOAA
Credit: NOAA
A
year after that first sign of an impending El Niño surged across the
ocean, another Kelvin wave is making its way across the basin. Only
this time, the ocean is already much warmer and most importantly, the
atmosphere seems to have finally gotten the memo, with the trade
winds weakening.
The
coupling between ocean and atmosphere isn’t following the usual
script, and the typical shifts in rain patterns haven’t emerged.
But L’Heureux noted the rarity of any response from the atmosphere
at this time of year. In spring, she said, it is harder for the ocean
and atmosphere “to essentially see each other.”
“We’re
fairly amazed,” she said.
Spring
and Summer
This
late winter emergence of the El Niño means that the hallmark
U.S. impacts —
wet and cool conditions across the southern U.S. — won’t happen.
“Over
us [the impact] becomes very, very muted” in spring, L’Heureux
said.
Forecasters
believe the current Kelvin wave and the already warmer ocean
temperatures, signal that the El Niño is going to persist, which was
another factor in officially declaring an event.
The
CPC forecasts a 50 to 60 percent chance that the El Niño will chug
along through the spring and summer. If it does, it could tamp
down the Atlantic hurricane season and
juice the season in the eastern Pacific, as many said it did last
summer, before the El Niño was official.
That
official designation has already spurred much debate in the climate
community, since the ocean was warm enough through much of 2014
to qualify
as an El Niño.
“I’m
sure it’s going to be discussed quite a bit,” L’Heureux said.
But
whether or not those warm oceans meant an El Niño was in place,
they, along with warm waters in other ocean basins, helped elevate
global surface temperatures in 2014, leading to the warmest year on
record.
Whether
that could happen again in 2015 remains to be seen, though the ocean
has a strong temperature memory and doesn’t respond to changes very
quickly. So that warmth is likely to hang on, or even rise.
“If
the El Niño intensifies, it may have a greater impact on the global
temperatures, as observed from past events,” Jessica Blunden, a
climate scientist with ERT, Inc., at the NOAA’s National Climatic
Data Center, said in an email. “But for now we are in a wait and
see mode.”
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