El Niño could be here soon, bringing wild weather and a hotter climate ...Egypt

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There are increasing indications El Niño is likely to form and strengthen into potentially a significant event during the next several months, throwing weather patterns worldwide out of whack. El Niño could affect the Atlantic hurricane season (if the timing is right) and heat the planet even further, making another record warm year much more likely than it otherwise would be either this year or next.

El Niño and La Niña are periodic climate cycles in the tropical Pacific Ocean that occur every few years and can have profound effects on global weather patterns. They can bring flooding to parts of Africa and drought to other areas, help pummel the West Coast with winter storms while leading to more heat extremes globally in the case of El Niño.

El Niño is characterized by unusually warm waters along the equatorial tropical Pacific Ocean, and a series of shifts in winds and precipitation patterns in the atmosphere. Those shifts are significant enough to affect weather around the world. Right now, unusually warm water is spreading under the ocean surface from the Western to the Eastern tropical Pacific, in what may be a precursor to such an event.

While there is still considerable uncertainty in the forecast, most projections from El Niño monitoring groups in the US and Australia, among others, show a current weak La Niña waning in the next few months. La Niña is El Niño’s cooler water sibling that can also lead to global weather disturbances. For now, experts are expecting the emergence of so-called “ENSO Neutral” conditions, meaning that neither a La Niña or an El Niño is present, for much of the latter half of spring and into the summer.

Then, depending on myriad factors ranging from the direction and strength of trade winds to the sloshing of warmer than average ocean waters from the Western to the Eastern tropical Pacific Ocean, an El Niño may emerge sometime in the late summer to fall time frame.

Outlooks from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology, and other groups all show the same general scenario, with varying degrees of confidence and slight differences in timing.

Right now, while the ocean is beginning to look more El Niño-like and projected to become even more so, the atmospheric circulation still reflects the influence of a weak La Niña. This means that the effects of an El Niño, should one develop, are still several months away.

In order to be more confident in predicting an El Niño, trade winds blowing from east-to-west across the equator would need to slacken, allowing more warm water from the western Pacific to push east and emerge at the surface. So far, this shift in the trade winds has not occurred consistently, but computer models project that this will change during the next few months.

A map of ocean temperature differences from normal during a strong El Niño. Red colors mean the ocean water is warmer than normal; blue means it’s cooler.

NOAA

In fact, some computer models, including the well-regarded European ensemble, are quite aggressive in developing an El Niño and progressing it into an intense “Super El Niño” event by late Fall. If this were to occur, the Atlantic hurricane season could be sleepier than usual, since El Niño’s tend to be accompanied by stronger wind shear over the tropical Atlantic Ocean.

Wind shear, which occurs when winds blow at different speeds and/or directions with height, acts as an impediment to fledgling tropical storms and hurricanes.

El Niño years also tend to boost global average surface temperatures, thereby acting in concert with human-caused global warming to set heat records. A strong El Niño, sometimes referred to as a “Super El Niño,” would be all but certain to vault global temperatures into record territory — speeding up warming further and potentially leading to more coral bleaching and other damaging effects.

Forecasters caution that El Niño predictions tend to be less accurate at this time of year, in what is known as the spring prediction barrier. One forecaster likened the barrier to forecasting in a fog, waiting for it to clear up before being more confident of what will happen next.

The barrier refers to a period when computer model projections for seasonal climate forecasting tend to be less reliable than at other times of the year. The greater uncertainty means that even though observational signs are starting to point to a developing El Niño, and computer models show an El Niño is more likely than not to emerge during the coming months, confidence in this scenario is not very high.

Typically, El Niño forecasts tend to become more reliable in June as summer approaches.

El Niño could be here soon, bringing wild weather and a hotter climate Egypt Independent.

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