What looming La Niña means for global temperatures

What looming La Niña means for global temperatures

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PARIS—El Niño, the natural weather phenomenon that contributed to 2023 being the hottest year on record, has recently subsided, paving the way for its opposing, cooling La Niña phase to begin.

But in the context of a warming planet due to human-caused climate change, scientists say that cooling effect may be miniscule.

Here is how the cycle called El Niño-Southern Oscillation (Enso) works to affect global weather:

El Niño

El Niño can weaken consistent trade winds that blow east to west across the tropical Pacific, influencing weather by affecting the movement of warm water across this vast ocean.

This weakening warms the usually cooler central and eastern sides of the ocean, altering rainfall over the equatorial Pacific and wind patterns that change temperature and rain around the world.

The extra heat at the surface of the Pacific releases energy into the atmosphere that can temporarily drive up global temperatures, which is why El Niño years are often among the warmest on record.

It occurs every two to seven years, and lasts nine to 12 months.

The latest El Niño, which began in June 2023, peaked among the five strongest such events on record, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO).

It typically results in drier conditions across southeast Asia, Australia, southern Africa, and northern South America, and conversely much wetter conditions in the Horn of Africa and the southern United States.

While it is unclear what impact climate change may be having on Enso, it is affecting how these events play out, said Michelle L’Heureux, lead Enso forecaster for the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) weather agency.

Climate change is making extreme events more frequent and intense, and when colliding with Enso can cause its associated drier or wetter conditions to “become more amplified,” she added.

The elevated global temperatures Enso causes also served as a “portal” into the future of climate change, L’Heureux said.

“It gives you … a bit of a preview of what a warmer world looks like because it is giving you a temporary boost. So we’re now at a new level we haven’t seen before,” she said.

Neutral period

Although El Niño has been dissipating, the first four months of 2024 have continued to break heat records—unsurprisingly as the cycle typically drives up temperatures the year after it develops.

Enso is “not an on-off switch,” L’Heureux explained. “It takes a while for the global atmospheric circulation to adjust.”

Scientists anticipate that the neutral period between the two cycles will begin between May and July.

Above-normal temperatures are forecast to persist through July across the northern and southern hemispheres, with just equatorial regions anticipated to see near-to-below normal temperatures, according to the WMO.

The neutral period is not likely to last long, L’Heureux explained.

Typically, after a strong El Niño as the world just experienced, La Niña soon follows.

La Niña

La Niña sees the eastern Pacific Ocean cool for a period of about one to three years, generating the opposite effects to El Niño on global weather.

It leads to wetter conditions in parts of Australia, southeast Asia, India, southeast Africa and northern Brazil, while causing drier conditions in parts of South America.

It can also contribute to more severe Atlantic hurricanes, and Noaa has forecast an “extraordinary” storm season ahead this year.

La Niña tends to bring down global temperatures, although L’Heureux warned against hopes of relief in areas like southeast Asia that have recently be battered by scorching heatwaves.

“The world is warming and Enso is acting secondary to that,” she said.

“Even this year with La Niña potentially developing, we’re still expecting basically a top-five global mean temperature record,” she said.

Noaa says there is a 69-percent chance of La Niña beginning sometime between July and September. —AFP

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