El-Nino's have long been used to explain away extreme weather events. The present heat wave in Australia, as well as the cold in the Northern Hemisphere have occured in a "balanced" year, when theoretically they shouldn't
Get
Used to Heat Waves: Extreme El Nino Events to Double
Extreme
weather events fueled by unusually strong El Ninos, such as the 1983
heatwave that led to the Ash Wednesday bushfires in Australia, are
likely to double in number as our planet warms.
19
January, 2014
An
international team of scientists from organizations including the ARC
Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science (CoECSS), the US
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and CSIRO, published
their findings in the journal Nature Climate Change.
"We
currently experience an unusually strong El Niño event every 20
years. Our research shows this will double to one event every 10
years," said co-author, Dr Agus Santoso of CoECSS.
"El
Nino events are a multi-dimensional problem, and only now are we
starting to understand better how they respond to global warming,"
said Dr Santoso.
Extreme El Niño events develop differently from
standard El Ninos, which first appear in the western Pacific. Extreme
El Nino's occur when sea surface temperatures exceeding 28°C develop
in the normally cold and dry eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean. This
different location for the origin of the temperature
increase
causes massive changes in global rainfall patterns.
"The
question of how global warming will change the frequency of extreme
El Niño events has challenged scientists for more than 20 years,"
said co-author Dr Mike McPhaden of US National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
"This
research is the first comprehensive examination of the issue to
produce robust and convincing results," said Dr McPhaden.
The
impacts of extreme El Niño events extend to every continent across
the globe.
The
1997-98 event alone caused $35-45 US billion in damage and claimed an
estimated 23,000 human lives worldwide.
"During
an extreme El Niño event countries in the western Pacific, such as
Australia and Indonesia, experienced devastating droughts and wild
fires, while catastrophic floods occurred in the eastern equatorial
region of Ecuador and northern Peru," said lead author, CSIRO's
Dr Wenju Cai
In
Australia, the drought and dry conditions induced by the 1982-83
extreme El Niño preconditioned the Ash Wednesday Bushfire in
southeast Australia, leading to 75 fatalities.
To
achieve their results, the team examined 20 climate models that
consistently simulate major rainfall reorganization during extreme El
Niño events. They found a substantial increase in events from the
present-day through the next 100 years as the eastern Pacific Ocean
warmed in response to global warming.
"This
latest research based on rainfall patterns, suggests that extreme El
Niño events are likely to double in frequency as the world warms
leading to direct impacts on extreme weather events worldwide."
"For
Australia, this could mean summer heat waves, like that recently
experienced in the south-east of the country, could get an additional
boost if they coincide with extreme El Ninos," said co-author,
Professor Matthew England from CoECSS.
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