Quote:The next El Niño: when is it coming and how strong might this one be for Australia?
After three wet La Niña years, an El Niño now looks likely, which could cut rainfall, raise temperatures and create nightmarish bushfire conditions
Since cold surface waters in the mid Pacific cool the atmosphere it must be by being warmed up by the atmosphere—and three La Ninas worth of warming the waters could indeed see s horrific super El Nino!
The Gun
Quote:Spanning more than 12,000km along the equator and between 100 and 200 metres below the surface of the Pacific Ocean, there is a massive blob of warm water.
If enough of that water makes its way to the surface, it could set off an El Niño event that can push up temperatures around the globe and raise the risk of Australia suffering heatwaves, droughts and bushfires.
“You can compare it to a loaded gun,” says Prof Axel Timmermann, the director of the IBS Center for Climate Physics at Pusan National University in South Korea. “The magazine is full, but the atmosphere hasn’t pulled the trigger yet.”
Prediction
Quote:Climate models from weather agencies around the globe surveyed by the Bureau of Meteorology are all showing that, by August, temperatures in the central equatorial Pacific will have risen to at least 0.8C above average – putting them into El Niño territory.
On Friday the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released its latest outlook, saying there was a 62% chance of an El Niño developing by July. . . .
Timmermann says to trigger El Niños, you first need several strong wind bursts from west to east and, so far, that hasn’t happened.
Even though there is wide agreement in the models that an El Niño is likely to form later this year, he says those models can’t predict winds. This is one reason why there is less confidence in the forecasts at this time of year. (SH autumn)
Dr Andrea Taschetto, an Enso expert at the University of New South Wales, explains that for an El Niño to form, the atmosphere needs to react with those warm ocean waters.
“We need to remember this is a coupled system,” she says. “The ocean and the atmosphere both need to respond. The winds are really important.”
Once an El Niño does start to materialise, another strong sign is a weakening of trade winds that usually blow from east to west that allows that warmer deeper water to rise to the surface.
To be really confident, forecasters will be waiting until May or June.
Effect on Australian weather
Quote:Taschetto says that El Niños that have warm surface water located in the central Pacific are more associated with lack of rainfall in Australia than those where the warmer water is further east.
Strong El Niños in 1997-98 and 2015-16 were centred further east, having less affect on Australia’s rainfall, Taschetto says.
“Australia is not as strongly affected by eastern pacific El Niño events but, elsewhere, those do have very strong impacts for places like South and North America. Australia tends to see more impacts with central Pacific El Niños.”
It is thought that central Pacific El Niños weaken the updrafts that help clouds and rain form over the east of Australia.
Extreme El Nino?
Quote:How strong might this El Niño be?
Some models from national weather agencies – including Australia’s – include projections that raise the chance of an extreme El Niño where temperatures in the Pacific are about 2C above average.
As Dr Mike McPhaden, of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said this week: “The magnitude of the predicted El Niños shows a very large spread, everything from blockbuster to wimp.”
Noaa’s outlook this week said there was a 40% chance that, by the end of the year, a strong El Niño with ocean temperatures above 1.5C could be active.
But Timmermann and others have warned it’s too early to have much confidence in those predictions.
So what?
Quote:What are the risks?
As well as cutting rainfall and increasing temperatures, marine biologists have said that El Niños increase the risk of severe coral bleaching along the Great Barrier Reef.
A ferry passes by the Sydney Opera House as smoke haze from bushfires blankets the city in 2019.
After the flood: what an El Niño might mean for Australia’s ecosystems
Read more
After three wet La Niña years in Australia, climate scientists and bushfire experts have said they are very concerned that all the grass and vegetation growth could create nightmarish bushfire conditions next summer.
Brown says the memories of the catastrophic and unprecedented black summer bushfires of 2019 and 2020 shouldn’t be forgotten.
“We are now primed for bushfires with this record [vegetation] growth. I feel we’re primed for one of the worst bushfire seasons ever.”
Taschetto and Brown say understanding the dynamics of Enso is an active area of research and there is still more to understand.
But Brown says studies have suggested that as the climate warms, “El Niños and La Niñas will become more extreme – that’s a real possibility”.
Yeah!
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/apr/18/the-next-el-nino-when-is-...