Droughts, fires, floods, extreme winters: El Nino to blame?
The world is almost certain to be struck by the "El Nino" phenomenon this year, with the
potential to induce "major climactic impacts" around the world, the Met Office has warned.
India and Australia are likely to be hit the hardest but the fallout could also be felt in Britain, where the last El Nino event in 2009/10 contributed to the heavy snowfall in the UK that winter.
The term El Nino relates to feedback between the atmosphere and ocean that occurs every two to seven years and can wreak havoc on the weather system, inflicting droughts and excessive rainfall across the world.
"El Nino is associated with
colder than average winters, but is only one of the players that determine the weather," a Met Office spokesman said.
This means that while the phenomenon increases the chance of a cold winter, and was found to have contributed to the freezing conditions across Northern Europe last time it struck, it was by no means certain that the UK would become blanketed in snow.
In a report that concludes the event is "probable", the Met Office predicts that the worst effects of the El Nino will be felt in India, during the forthcoming three-month Monsoon season.
"The risk of a poor monsoon is two to three times greater this year than normal. So far the progress of the Indian monsoon rains bears this out, with a late and weak start to the season with less than 50 per cent of normal rainfall in June over much of India," a Met Office spokesman said.
The prospect of a weak monsoon season has raised
fears of low crop production and rising food prices.
The Met Office statement followed hard on the heels of a United Nations warning of an 80 per cent chance that an El Nino event could begin
as soon as October and a 60 per cent chance it would kick off
by the end of August.
"El Nino leads to extreme events and has a pronounced warming effect," said Michel Jarraud, head of the UN's World Meteorological Society.
An El Nino event occurs when the prevailing trade winds that circulate over surface waters in the tropical pacific begin to weaken. This allows warm waters of the western pacific to wash back eastward, dragging precipitation with it,
leaving countries like India, Indonesia and Australia drier, and increasing the chances of wildfires and lower crop production.
Meanwhile, the phenomenon
precipitates heavier rainfall in the South American and eastern Pacific nations, raising the prospect of floods and landslides.
But El Nino does not spell bad news for everyone. For example, the event is expected to bring much needed rain to the American west, which has been subjected to a severe drought in recent months.
Homes in Pacifica, California, slide into the ocean during the 1997-98 El Nino event which caused extreme weather worldwide (Reuters)
The name El Nino is believed to have been coined in the 19th Century after Peruvian fishermen observed it around Christmas. The word is Spanish for boy, in reference to the infant Jesus Christ. La Nina, the word for girl, was devised later to label the reverse phenomenon, which is characterised by unusually cool ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific, the last of which ended in April 2012.
"We remain vulnerable to this force of nature but we can protect ourselves by being better prepared," said Ms Jarraud. "Our understanding of El Nino and La Nina has increased dramatically in recent years and this knowledge has enabled us to develop very successful climate services for society.
"Advance warning has given governments around the world time to make contingency plans for the impact of this year's expected El Nino on the agriculture, water management, health and other climate sensitive sectors," he added.
The MET office has years under it's belt of getting winter forecasts wrong.
[Link] The statistics of a cool phase of the PDO (we are currenly in one) lasting 35 something years, favors La Nina's over El Nino's.
Odds are heavily stacked against the MET office winter forecast. They have been "hit by a Hoover", meaning that Global Warming fever sucked them up, and that's thier bias.
They might get lucky, though, but don't hold your breath.
Myself, I would like to see an El Nino shut the drought-mongers up.