A
super El Niño on the way? Subtle signs emerging
20
March, 2014
Mashable’s
Andrew Freedman has penned an
intriguing and important piece suggesting the possible El Niño
in the pipeline may be a doozy,
comparable to the strongest ever recorded:
Since climate forecasters declared an “El Niño Watch” on March 6, the odds of such an event in the tropical Pacific Ocean have increased, and based on recent developments, some scientists think this event may even rival the record El Niño event of 1997-1998.
Recall
an El Niño event is an episodic warming of the eastern tropical
Pacific ocean, which often has worldwide weather implications.
Freedman
interviews two scientists, Eric Blake from the National Hurricane
Center and Paul Roundy from SUNY-Albany, who see early indicators
reminiscent of the development stages of past whopper El Niño events.
One
important possible indicator of the lead up to an El Niño is a
reversal in the trade winds observed in the equatorial Pacific, from
a prevailing easterly (from the east) to westerly (from the west)
direction. In recent weeks and months, there have been strong
westerly “bursts”.
From
Freedman’s piece:
“It’s something we haven’t really seen since the ’97 El Niño,” Blake said of the westerly wind bursts and ocean observations. Instead of having trade winds blowing from the east at five to 10 mph, some locations in the western Pacific have had winds from the west blowing at up to 30 miles per hour, Blake says. This is important because it has ripple effects on the sea and below the sea surface.
So
impressed by the strong and persistent westerly winds, Roundy told
Freedman he thinks there’s “around” an 80 percent chance of an
unusually strong El Niño.
Separately,
meteorologist Michael Ventrice from Weather Services
International, discusses a
possible related harbinger of a big El Niño: a powerhouse eastward
push of water, known as a Kelvin wave, under the sea surface. This
kind of underwater wave, triggered by the westerly wind bursts, is
key for transporting warm water from the west Pacific to the east
Pacific and getting an El Niño event underway. But
Ventrice stresses it needs some additional propulsion:
The current Kelvin wave in the Pacific Ocean has achieved the same strength as the one that preceded the 1997 Super El Niño event. This is an extremely rare feat but there still has to be a number of things to happen before we can say we are headed towards a strong El Niño. We need to see the continuation of strong westerly winds near the Equator over the Central Pacific to keep the momentum forward.
In
Freedman’s piece, Blake and Roundy emphasize that a strong El
Niño is no sure thing. They point out the westerly winds could
relax halting the El Niño’s formation. Tony Barnston, a
climate forecaster at the International Research Institute for
Climate and Society (IRI), offers Freedman this cautious
assessment:
Unless we continue to get westerly wind events in the coming weeks, there is no guarantee that it will be a big event, and there is a 40% or so chance we will not get an El Niño at all
Officially,
NOAA says there is just over a 50 percent chance of an El Niño
of any variety, weak, moderate or strong. (Note: the normal chance of
an El Niño would be 33 percent, since its parent weather
pattern known as the El Niño Southern Oscillation or ENSO, has three
phases: El Niño, La Niña, and neutral).
Suppose
a strong El Niño event does materialize later this summer or
fall. What might it mean?
- Large amounts of heat from the tropical Pacific ocean would be released into the atmosphere, likely raising global temperatures to record-setting levels
- Hurricane activity would likely be suppressed in the Atlantic
- Washington, D.C. might see depressed snow next winter. Our two least snowy winters on record (0.1 inches at Reagan National Airport) coincided with two of the three strongest El Nino events on record (1997-1998 and 1972-1973).
The
possible development of El Nino is literally a fluid situation. Keep
your eyes on the Pacific.
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