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DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
Super strong El Niño in 2014?


Follow @TheWatchers_ Posted by Chillymanjaro on May 22, 2014 in categories Climate change, Editors' picks, Ocean


Conditions in the Pacific Ocean continue to suggest that a super strong El Niño might be forming in 2014. Strong bursts of winds coming out of the west in the equatorial tropical Pacific replaced the easterly winds and ocean surface currents, which normally move westward across the Pacific basin, have now reversed.
El Niño causes major weather shifts and extremes around the globe.
Some similarities exist between the ocean and atmospheric state right now compared to observations shortly before the onset of the 1997-1998 El Niño event, one of the most potent El Niño events of the 20th century.
A series of massive ripples in sea level (known as Kelvin waves) have been spotted moving across the Pacific from Australia to South America. Undersea Kelvin wave pattern was generated by localized west wind bursts in the western Pacific that began in mid-January 2014.
The current Kelvin wave is of approximately the same size as in 1997/98 but, based on current observations, it appears to contain more heat. In fact, it now appeares to be the hottest Kelvin wave ever seen.


Cross-section of the tropical Pacific Ocean showing warm water at depth in the western Pacific, moving east. (Credit: NOAA)


The maps above show the ten-day average of sea surface height centered on May 2, 1997 (left), and May 3, 2014. Shades of red and orange indicate where the water is warmer and above normal sea level. Shades of blue-green show where sea level and temperatures are lower than average. Normal sea-level conditions appear in white. The 1997 map was assembled from data collected by the TOPEX/Poseidon satellite, while the 2014 data comes from the Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason 2 satellite.
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
The growth of temperature anomalies from +0.4°C in mid-April to +0.9°C now has encouraged projections of an upward warming trend confirming the development of El Nino.


“This is a big jump in temperature, from now on waters will hardly be cooled, the event is irreversible,” oceanic scientist Luis Icochea told Undercurrent.


Icochea, who in April said that abnormally high temperatures were reminiscent of 1997-98 – when took place one of the strongest El Nino’s ever – is confident El Nino will develop this year.


“Everything suggests El Nino will be very strong, without ruling out the possibility of an extraordinary event,” Icochea said.
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
El Nino could mean a warmer winter for Canada


CTV National News: Warming weather conditions

From out of the deep freeze comes a forecast all Canadians can enjoy, Janet Dirks has the details on El Nino’s return.
Extended: Warm weather for Canada?

Environment Canada's Dave Phillips shares what forecasters are predicting for Canada’s winter. So far, temperatures may be mild.
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Text:



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Christina Commisso, CTVNews.ca
Published Thursday, June 26, 2014 8:46PM EDT
Canadians still reeling from a bitter winter that saw temperatures dip to near record levels will be happy to hear that forecasters are predicting a strong chance of El Nino reappearing before the year's end.
This could mean a warmer-than-usual winter for Canada, according to Environment Canada climatologist David Phillips.
Phillips said El Nino produced a mild winter in Canada in 2009/10 – the warmest winter on record – and in 1997/98, which marked the sixth warmest winter in 67 years .
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A pedestrian battles the high winds and blowing snow as he walks in downtown Halifax on Wednesday, March 26, 2014. (Andrew Vaughan / THE CANADIAN PRESS)
"This is why a lot of Canadians are excited, because next winter looks a little less brutal and brittle than what we saw this winter," Phillips told CTV News.
The El Nino, a flow of unusually warm surface waters from the Pacific Ocean toward and along the western coast of South America, changes rain and temperature patterns around the world and usually raises global temperatures.
On Thursday, the United Nations' World Meteorological Organization put the odds of El Nino at 60 per cent between June and August, rising to 75-80 per cent between October and December. It said the expected warming would come on top of the effects of man-made global warming.
The organization said it's too early to predict the exact impact on global temperatures in 2014, but it expects the long-term warming trend to continue as a result of rising greenhouse gas concentrations.
Phillips said while an 80 per cent chance of El Nino by the year's end are good odds in the weather business, there's never a guarantee when it comes to El Nino.
"The water temperatures have warmed up nicely across the Pacific, but the atmosphere hasn't responded to it quite yet," he said. "It's a dance that takes place between the oceans of the atmosphere."
Phillips said in an El Nino year, there are fewer Atlantic hurricanes and more rainfall in Arizona, California and Florida, which would be good news considering the recent drought situations in those states.
However, El Nino also typically means worse droughts in places like Australia, the Philippines and Brazil, and heavy rains along the western side of South America.
As for Canada, Phillips said we'll have to wait until the winter to see the full effects of El Nino.
Environment Canada, meanwhile, is calling for warmer conditions in the western and eastern provinces and normal temperatures in the central part of the country for the remainder of the summer.
"We think the best part of summer is still ahead of us," Phillips said.
With files from CTV's Alberta Bureau Chief Janet Dirks​
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
Will monsoon recover in July? El Nino intensity may be moderate
By Jayashree Bhosale, ET Bureau | 28 Jun, 2014, 01.04AM ISTPost a Comment
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READ MORE ON » World Meteorological Organisation | WMO | settlement option | Seasonal Adjustment | open | Monsoon | Insurability




So far, barely 9% of the country has seen normal rainfall as the monsoon stopped advancing on June 15 and the rain deficit has been as high.
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PUNE: India's June rain deficit widened to 42% with the monsoon stuck in its tracks now for 12 days in a row, but global forecasters offered a ray of hope for the Narendra Modi government as the disruptive El Nino phenomenon may not be as intense as previously feared and, more importantly, may only develop after the four-month season ends.


The World Meteorological Organisation ( WMO) said there is an 80% chance that El Nino will develop in October or later, well after the June-September monsoon retreats, and only a 60% chance that it will strike before that.


El Nino is associated with changes in wind patterns that warm up the surface of parts of Pacific Ocean, triggering floods and droughts in different parts of the world. In India, El Nino has often, but not always, disrupted the progress of monsoon rainfall.


So far, barely 9% of the country has seen normal rainfall as the monsoon stopped advancing on June 15 and the rain deficit has been as high as 60-75% in recent days.


June has been this dry only thrice in the past 100 years. This has delayed the planting of crops, caused heat waves in parts of the country, and raised fears of inflation, but the Met department ( IMD) is already expecting better rain in the next two months.


This is significant because most of the monsoon rain is spread across July and August, and timely efforts by the government can minimise losses. Vegetable prices have stabilised although the current dry patch can change the situation.


"Often, June turns out to be a deficient year. June rainfall is highly variable. Months of July and August give the main contribution to seasonal total rainfall as there are often chances of revival of monsoon in July and August," AK Jaswal, deputy D-G of meteorology, research, told ET.


In 2009-10, when India faced the most severe drought in 37 years, June rainfall was about 47% below average but July was much better, falling only 4.6% short of normal.


This helped revive food production. Foodgrain output fell 6.9% to 218.11 million tonnes even though rainfall dried up again in August and September that year.


This year's forecasts are more promising. What will give comfort to the government are the reserves of water for irrigation, which look better this week after draining rapidly in the previous week.


India's 85 main reservoirs, which are usually depleted by the time the monsoon arrives, were filled to 25% of their capacity, better than the level of 24% at this time last year, and significantly more than the 10-year average of 19%.


This provides enough water for irrigated areas. July and August rainfall will be vital because June has been exceptionally dry, experts said, adding this month's deficiency will hit some kharif crops in any case.


"Even if the rainfall improves in July, the June deficiency will result in a drop in productivity by about 5-10% as the plants miss the grand growth period. The biggest impact could be on moong and urad.​
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
Govt preparing for El Nino
Posted on 30 June 2014 - 08:06pm
Last updated on 30 June 2014 - 09:01pm
Vathani Panirchellvum
newsdesk@thesundaily.com
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PUTRAJAYA: The government is taking all necessary steps needed to be prepared for the effects of El Nino, said the national committee that has been formed to handle the matter.


According to the Metrological Department, there are indications of a low to medium scale El Nino phenomenon forming between June to August and could last until mid-2015.


"Although the phenomenon is expected to be low to medium in intensity, the government is still taking necessary steps to be ready. An El Niño occurrence with the same intensity happened between 2009 and 2010 and normally does not impact Malaysia too much. But the El Niño that happened between 1997 and 1998 was had a strong intensity, and effected multiple sectors in Malaysia, including the environment, health, agriculture, transportation, economy and socioeconomic sectors of the country," the committee said in a statement after its first meeting in Putrajaya, that was chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin.


Among the steps discussed by the committee were preparations by the government to ensure there is no food shortage, involving sectors like agriculture, farming and fishing.


"A few short-term steps would be taken, involving good irrigation planning, increasing farming efficiency and planting crops that would mature faster in hot seasons. We are going to diversify the income for plantations and have awareness campaigns and develop an El Nino simulation model," it said.


"As an alternative, imports of food will be increased if there is a serious drop in local supply. If there is still a shortage after these steps are taken, farmers and plantation owners will be assisted through Tabung Bantuan Bencana Agromakanan to restore their plantation projects to ensure adequate food supply."


To control the effects of El Niño on the environment, the government, through the National Security Council, will mobilize its members from various government agencies like the Health Ministry, Education Ministry, Metrological Department, Environment Department, Fire and Rescue Department, Civil Defence Department and Department of Broadcasting, to monitor and take action to prevent open burning and peat fires.


"This council will also do cloud-seeding if necessary to increase the water level in rivers and catchments as well as to combat the haze problem," it added.


Other contingency plans include water redistribution from non-affected areas to areas that would face water storage, preparing other logistics like water tankers and static tanks to supply water to affected areas. As a last resort, water rationing would be implemented.


"People are advised to take necessary steps in facing El Niño, like maintaining the cleanliness of their surroundings to prevent mosquitos from breeding and to prevent water pollution. People are also advised to save electricity, water and food, reduce activities that may create fires and always adhere to the instructions by the government in facing El Niño," the committee said.
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
Sea surface temperature in the equatorial Pacific Ocean (above). El Niño is characterized by unusually warm temperatures in the equatorial Pacific.


The "El Nino" phenomenon, which sparks climate extremes around the globe, is likely to take hold in the Pacific Ocean by the end of the year and could even do so within weeks, the UN said on Thursday.


There was an 80 percent likelihood that El Nino could start between October and November and 60 percent that it would do so between now and end of August, said the UN's weather agency, the World Meteorological Organization.


The El Nino phenomenon -- which can lead to extremes including droughts and heavy rainfall across the globe -- occurs every two to seven years, when the prevailing trade winds that circulate over surface waters in the tropical Pacific start to weaken.


The phenomenon, which last occurred between June 2009 and May 2010, can play havoc for farmers and global agricultural markets.


It leaves countries like India, Indonesia and Australia drier, increasing chances of wildfires and lower crop production, while leading to heavier rainfall in the eastern Pacific and South American nations, raising the spectre of floods and landslides.


"El Nino leads to extreme events and has a pronounced warming effect," said WMO chief Michel Jarraud.


El Nino drags precipitation across the Pacific, leaving countries including India and Indonesia drier.


India's monsoon rains have already arrived five days later than normal, and the prospect of a weak rainy season has raised fears of lower crop production and rising food prices.


In Indonesia, there are concerns that dry conditions could fan wildfires caused by slash-and-burn techniques used to clear land quickly and cheaply.


Fires on Indonesia's western Sumatra island last June already caused the worst haze in Southeast Asia for more than a decade, affecting daily life for millions and sparking a heated diplomatic row with neighboring Singapore and Malaysia.


Australia also tends to be drier during an El Nino, increasing the risk of bush fires.


El Nino-year winters are generally drier in the north of the United States and Europe.


El Nino also causes heavier-than-normal rainfall in the eastern Pacific and South America -- raising the spectre of floods and landslides, as well as shifting nutrient-rich ocean currents that lure fish.


In the past, that has battered local fishing industries and caused diplomatic battles over shifting fishing zones.


The southwest United States and southern Africa, meanwhile, tend to be drier, while east Africa faces heavy rainfall.


- Vulnerable to 'force of nature' -


The name El Nino is believed to have been coined in the 19th century after Peruvian fisherman 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 characterized by unusually cool ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific, the last of which ended in April 2012.


Both are significant markers of global climate fluctuations.


"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," said Jarraud.


"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 said.


"We remain vulnerable to this force of nature but we can protect ourselves by being better prepared," he added.


The two climate patterns are watched carefully by scientists who say that, while they are not caused by climate change, rising ocean temperatures stoked by global warming may affect their intensity and frequency.


"It is too early to assess the precise impact on global temperatures in 2014, but we expect the long-term warming trend to continue as a result of rising greenhouse gas concentrations," noted Jarraud.


Copyright (2014) AFP. All rights reserved.






Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/el-nino-likely-to-develop-2014-7#ixzz36CKoDaw0
 

Amir Mohsen

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
Eight Misconceptions About El Niño (and La Niña) Posted by Francesco Fiondella on June 30, 2014
For years, people have been pointing to El Niño as the culprit behind floods, droughts, famines, economic failures, and record-breaking global heat. Can a single climate phenomenon really cause all these events? Is the world just a step away from disaster when El Niño conditions develop? What exactly is this important climate phenomenon and why should society care about it? Who will be most affected? We address these questions as well as clear up some common misconceptions about El Niño, La Niña, and everything in between!
First, the basics. El Niño refers to the occasional warming of the eastern and central Pacific Ocean around the equator (see image below). The warmer water tends to get only 1 to 3 degrees Celsius above the average sea-surface temperatures for that area, although in the very strong El Niño of 1997-98, it reached 5 degrees or more above average in some locations. La Niña is the climate counterpart to El Niño– a yin to its yang, so to speak. A La Niña is defined by cooler-than-normal sea-surface temperatures across much of the equatorial eastern and central Pacific. El Niño and La Niña episodes each tend to last roughly a year, although occasionally they may last 18 months or longer.
ENSO-states-viz_0.jpg
These global maps centered on the Pacific Ocean show patterns of sea surface temperature during El Niño and La Niña episodes. The colors along the equator show areas that are warmer or cooler than the long-term average. Image courtesy of Climate.gov

The Pacific is the largest ocean on the planet, so a significant change in its normal pattern of surface temperatures would lead to corresponding changes in atmospheric winds. This can have consequences for temperature, rainfall and vegetation in faraway places. In normal years, trade winds push warm water—and its associated heavier rainfall—westward toward Indonesia. The warmer waters in the west and relatively colder waters in the east Pacific reinforce the pattern and strength of the trade winds. But during an El Niño, which occurs on average once every three-to-five years, the winds peter out and can even reverse direction, bringing the rains toward South America instead. This is why we typically associate El Niño with drought in Indonesia and Australia and flooding in Peru. We have observed enough El Niño events by now that we know these changing climate conditions, combined with other factors, can have serious impacts on society, such as reduced crop harvests, wildfires, or loss of life and property in floods. There is also evidence that the regional climate anomalies associated with El Niño conditions increase the risk of certain vector-borne diseases, such as malaria, in places where they don’t occur every year and where disease control is limited.
7863823350_71d727404b_b-300x225.jpg
El Niño sometimes brings drought to Africa’s Sahel.

However, while we may expect certain climate impacts in certain regions during an El Niño event, there is still a possibility that other aspects of the climate system in a particular year may work to offset the influence of El Niño. During either an El Niño or a La Niña, we also observe changes in atmospheric pressure, wind and rainfall patterns in different parts of the Pacific, and beyond. An El Niño is associated with high pressure in the western Pacific, whereas a La Niña is associated with high pressure in the eastern Pacific. The ‘see-sawing’ of high pressure that occurs as conditions move from El Niño to La Niña is known as the Southern Oscillation. The oft-used term El Niño-Southern Oscillation, or ENSO, reminds us that El Niño and La Niña episodes reflect changes not just to the ocean, but to the atmosphere as well. For more details on ENSO, please visit the International Research Institute for Climate and Society’s official ENSO page.
ENSO is one of the main sources of year-to-year variability in weather and climate on Earth and has significant socioeconomic implications for many regions around the world. The developing El Niño conditions in recent months offers an opportunity to clear up some common misconceptions about the climate phenomenon:
[h=3]1. Do El Niño periods cause more disasters than normal periods? On a worldwide basis, this isn’t necessarily the case. But ENSO conditions do allow climate scientists to produce more accurate seasonal forecasts and help them better predict extreme drought or rainfall in several regions around the globe. (Read a 2005 paper on the topic here.) On a regional level, however, we’ve seen that El Niño and La Niña exert fairly consistent influences on the climate of some regions. For example, El Niño conditions typically cause more rain to fall in Peru, and less rain to fall in Indonesia and Southern Africa. These conditions, combined with socioeconomic factors, can make a country or region more vulnerable to impacts. On the other hand, because El Niño enhances our ability to predict the climate conditions expected in these same regions, one can take advantage of that improved predictability to help societies improve preparedness, issue early warnings and reduce possible negative impacts.
This set of interactive maps from IRI’s Data Library shows the historical tendency of El Niño and La Niña to affect seasonal precipitation around the world.

[h=3]2. Do El Niño and La Niña significantly affect climate in most regions of the globe? They significantly affect only about 25% of the world’s land surface during any particular season, and less than 50% of land surface during the entire time that ENSO conditions persist.
[h=3]3. Do regions affected by El Niño and La Niña see impacts for the entire 8-12 months that the climate conditions last? No. Most regions will only see impacts during one specific season, which may start months after the ENSO event first develops. For example, the current El Niño may cause the southern U.S. to get wetter-than-normal conditions in the December to March season, but Kenyans may see wetter-than-normal conditions between October and December.
Walter Baethgen discusses the ‘winners and losers’ in agriculture during El Niño

[h=3]4. Do El Niño episodes lead to adverse impacts only? Fires in southeast Asia, droughts in eastern Australia, flooding in Peru often accompany El Niño events. Much of the media coverage on El Niño has focused on the more extreme and negative consequences typically associated with the phenomenon. To be sure, the impacts can wreak havoc in some developing and developed countries alike, but El Niño events are also associated with reduced frequency of Atlantic hurricanes, warmer winter temperatures in northern half of U.S., which reduce heating costs, and plentiful spring/summer rainfall in southeastern Brazil, central Argentina and Uruguay, which leads to above-average summer crop yields.
[h=3]5. Should we worry more during El Niño episodes than La Niña episodes? Not necessarily. They each come with their own set of features and risks. In general, El Niño is associated with increased likelihood of drought throughout much of the tropical land areas, whereas La Niña is associated with increased risk of drought throughout much of the mid-latitudes (see maps here and here.) El Niño may have gained more attention in the scientific community, and thus the public, because it substantially alters the temperature and circulation patterns in the tropical Pacific. La Niña, on the other hand, tends to amplify normal conditions in that part of the world: the relatively cold temperatures in the eastern equatorial Pacific become colder, the relatively warm temperatures become even warmer, and the low-level winds blowing from east to west along the equatorial Pacific strengthen.
[h=3]6. The stronger the El Niño/La Niña, the stronger the impacts, and vice versa, right? Current forecasts show that a weak-to-moderate El Niño is likely to develop by mid-autumn 2014. Does this mean we should expect weak-to-moderate impacts? Not necessarily. The important point to remember is that ENSO shifts the odds of some regions receiving less or more rainfall than they usually do, but it doesn’t guarantee this will happen. For example, scientists expected the very strong El Niño of 1997/98–which triggered wildfires in Indonesia and flooding and crop loss in Kenya – to also increase the chances of below-normal summer rainfall in India and South Africa, but this didn’t happen. On the other hand, India did experience strong rainfall deficiencies during a much weaker El Niño in 2002, and severe drought during the moderate El Niño of 2009-2010. So, while there is a slight tendency for stronger El Nino/La Niña events to have stronger impacts, many exceptions may be expected.
[h=3]7. Are El Niño and La Niña events directly responsible for specific storms or other weather events? We usually can’t pin a single event on an El Niño or La Niña, just like we can’t blame global climate changes for any single hurricane. ENSO events typically affect the frequency or strength of weather events–for example. when looked at over the course of a season, regions experience increased or decreased rainfall.
[h=3]8. Are El Niño and La Niña closely related to global warming? El Niño and La Niña are a normal part of the earth’s climate and have likely been occurring for millions of years. Global climate change may affect the characteristics of El Niño and La Niña events, but the research is still ongoing.
Thanks to Lisa Goddard and Anthony Barnston for lending their expertise and for reviewing this article.

 

Amir Mohsen

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
[h=2]PRELIMINARY June 2014 Sea Surface Temperature (SST) UpdatePosted on June 30, 2014by Bob Tisdale
NINO REGION SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE ANOMALIES
The sea surface temperatures of the equatorial Pacific continue be above the threshold of El Niño condition, though two regions (NINO4 and NINO1+2) show recent drops in surface temperatures. The following are the weekly sea surface temperature anomalies for the 4 most-often-used NINO regions for the week of June 25[SUP]th[/SUP]. From west to east:

  • NINO4 (5S-5N, 160E-150W) = +0.72
  • NINO3.4 (5S-5N, 170W-120W) = +0.67
  • NINO3 (5S-5N, 150W-90W) = +1.06
  • NINO1+2 (10S-0, 90W-80W) = +1.38
http://bobtisdale.wordpress.com/2014/06/30/preliminary-june-2014-sea-surface-temperature-sst-update/


 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
http://www.independent.co.uk/enviro...trike-this-year-met-office-warns-9577018.html



El Nino-like conditions kick with annual temperature record smashed
Date
July 1, 2014
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Peter Hannam
Environment Editor, The Sydney Morning Herald
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Records melt as another El Nino brews in the Pacific. Photo: BoM
Australia smashed its temperature record in the year to the end of June, beating a high set during the most recent El Nino weather event in the Pacific.


Buried in the Bureau of Meteorology's monthly report on national conditions, the agency noted the 12-month mean temperature was a "solid highest-on-record" result.


In fact, mean temperatures were a full 1.08 degrees above the long-term average, smashing the previous record July-June anomaly by 0.18 degrees. The previous record was set in the 12 months to June 2010 – an El Nino period.




Almost the whole country has been warmer than average. Photo: BoM
“The July-June year anomaly can be interesting as it provides a way of examining conditions across the warm season as a whole, which can capture the influence of signals such as El Niño and La Niña,” the bureau said.


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That influence may continue, with the bureau also reporting that fresh signs of an El Nino have been identified in the Pacific during the past fortnight. During El Nino years, much of Australia tends to cop warmer and drier than usual weather, making active bushfire seasons and droughts more likely.


“We’ve still got the set-up for an El Nino,” said Andrew Watkins, manager of climate prediction services at the bureau, noting the likelihood of such an event remains "at least a 70 per cent" chance.




Dry in the east and far west. Photo: BoM
Ocean conditions have been primed for an El Nino for some months with waters in the central and eastern Pacific unusually warm. Meteorologists have been watching for evidence the atmosphere would “couple” or respond, signs of which have lately appeared.


These include a weakening of the easterly trade winds and increased cloud formation in the region where the dateline and equator intersect. The Southern Oscillation Index (SOI), a key gauge, had also dropped sharply.


“If the winds and the cloud and the SOI continue with the current trends, they may well reach true El Nino levels, and hence start to feed back on the ocean,” said Dr Watkins.


Conditions are similar to 2009 - the previous El Nino year - with current observations and models pointing to an event developing by spring.


Warm start to 2014


Australia posted its hottest year on record in 2013 and this year has also got off to a warm start.


NSW, Queensland and Victoria all posted record mean temperatures for the first half of 2014, with June also much warmer than normal, the Bureau of Meteorology said. Australia-wide, it was the fourth-highest start to a year.


In June alone, nationwide rainfall was 32 per cent below average for the month. Over the past year, areas such as north-east NSW and south-eastern Queensland have reported rain very much below average while northern regions and Tasmania have had relatively good rains.


Over the past 12 months, mean temperatures were also the highest on record for the states of NSW, Queensland and South Australia.


For south-eastern Australia, the late arrival of winter saw more temperature records tumble in June.


The near-term outlook has Melbourne expecting days with maximums of 15-16 degrees over the next week, or about 1.5-2.5 degrees above average for July.


In Sydney, the next week should also be warmer than average by about the same margin, with daily tops expected in the 18-20 degree range.


Australia’s mean temperatures have risen about 0.9 degrees over the past century as the global climate has warmed. Comparing the past 15 years with the 1951-1980 period, the chance of a very warm month has increased five-fold and the frequency of very cool months had dropped by about a third, the CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology noted in their latest State of the Climate report released earlier this year.



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Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/environment/w...ord-smashed-20140702-zssez.html#ixzz36Im5VIuD
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
El Nino weather phenomenon will strike this year, Met Office warns



TOM BAWDEN ENVIRONMENT EDITOR Tuesday 01 July 2014






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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.
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
S & T » SCIENCE


July 3, 2014
Updated: July 3, 2014 11:29 IST
Could this year’s El Niño be like the 2009 one?
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Since 1901, the June rainfall had a shortfall of over 40 per cent in only four previous years. Photo: Kommuri Srinivas
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With the classical El Niño, the tropical eastern Pacific near the South American coast becomes warmer than usual while the western side of the ocean cools.


This year, the monsoon has got off to an unpropitious start, with last month's nationwide rainfall showing a deficit of 43 per cent. Since 1901, the June rainfall had a shortfall of over 40 per cent in only four previous years. The last time this occurred was in 2009 when rains were poor in the following three months as well and the monsoon ended in a drought.


Some scientists are seeing similarities between the El Niño, the exceptional warming of the tropical Pacific Ocean, that is occurring this year and one that turned up five years back.


With the classical El Niño, the tropical eastern Pacific close to the coast of South America becomes warmer than usual while the western side of the ocean, near Indonesia, cools. In recently years, scientists have drawn a distinction between this sort of El Niño and ones where the warming is principally in the central Pacific. The latter, it is argued, has a greater impact on the monsoon, reducing rains over India, than the former.


But the El Niño that manifested in 2009 was unique, according to K. Ashok of the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM) in Pune. That year, from around June to almost October, the entire Pacific basin turned abnormally warm, with no cooling anywhere.


An assessment


In an assessment issued a week back, the World Meteorological Organization noted that this year's developing El Niño has a “somewhat unusual pattern” with sea surface temperatures that are above average across virtually the entire tropical Pacific, not just in the eastern and central portions.


In a paper published in Geophysical Research Letters in 2012, Dr. Ashok, along with T. P. Sabin, and P. Swapna, both of them also at IITM, as well as Raghu Murtugudde, professor of atmospheric and oceanic sciences at the University of Maryland in the U.S, examined the effect that basin-wide warming in the Pacific could have. A climate model run with the Pacific sea surface temperatures of 2009 reproduced many features seen that year, including reduced rainfall over India.


“The tricky question is how the El Niño will evolve this year, whether the basin-wide warming will persist in the coming months and the impact that will have on the monsoon,” remarked Dr. Murtugudde.


Weakened winds


During the evolution of a typical El Niño, as the western side of tropical Pacific cools and eastern part warms, trade winds, which blow from east to west over that ocean, weaken considerably and sometimes even reverse direction. This shift in wind pattern aids the growth of the El Niño.


In an El Niño with basin-wide warming, the development of such a sea-surface temperature gradient and the accompanying change in winds was disrupted. Consequently, the El Niño may not strengthen as it ordinarily would, he pointed out. However, even a weaker-than-expected El Niño might wreck the monsoon.


What matters most for the Indian monsoon are conditions over equatorial central Pacific, according to Sulochana Gadgil, a leading atmospheric scientist who was at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore.


Atmospheric conditions over that part of the ocean have been adverse for the monsoon this year.


Moreover, “a developing El Niño can have a major impact as seen in 2002 and 2004.”


The evolving El Niño was the primary factor keeping the Indian monsoon suppressed this year, said D.R. Sikka, a distinguished meteorologist who retired as director of IITM and was the first to establish the link between El Niño and droughts over India.


Weather models indicated that rainfall in July could also be somewhat below normal. “We are hoping that some recovery will take place in the month of August.”


Keywords: southwest monsoon, El Niño, tropical Pacific Ocean


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DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
Weather patterns falling in line with El Nino forecast
ABC Rural Cassie Hough


Posted Wed 2 Jul 2014, 2:13pm AEST

PHOTO: El Nino impact on crop yields is unpredictable but the wheat price is forecast to rise due lower global forecasts, and unrest in Ukraine. (File Photo) (Arlie Douglas: ABC)
AUDIO: Weather patterns start to reinforce El Nino prediction (ABC Rural)
MAP: Toowoomba 4350
More weather patterns are emerging to reinforce the Bureau of Meteorology's prediction of at least a 70 per cent chance of an El Nino weather pattern developing in Spring 2014.


The tropical Pacific Ocean temperatures have warmed to levels associated with a weak El Nino and the Southern Oscillation Index has dropped by more than 10 points.


However the atmospheric patterns are still neutral and the water below the ocean surface has cooled.


Bureau of Meteorology senior climate liaison officer, Jeff Sabburg, says the El Nino is not here yet because these atmospheric patterns and the ocean patterns have not yet coupled.


"We have to have three or four criteria to be satisfied and as far as the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) the two month average SOI has to be minus seven or lower but if something else like the sea surface temperatures in the tropical Pacific were to go out we may not still be in an El Nino so the point being that both the atmosphere and the ocean have to be coupled,"Mr Sabburg said.


For Australia, El Nino weather patterns are often associated with below-average rainfall over southern and eastern inland areas and above-average daytime temperatures over southern parts of the continent.


Of the last 26 El Nino's that have occurred in Australia, 17 have translated into an increased risk of drought, which Mr Sabburg says means 35 per cent of the time Australia hasn't gone into drought.


"Just because we have a 70 per cent change of going into an El Nino this year [doesn't mean there will be a drought].


"There is a 65 per cent chance this will translate into a drought condition."


The 2009 El Nino developed in a similar way to the way this El Nino is developing this year and in 2009/10 there were serious drought conditions across much of eastern Australia.


"What we can say about the 2009, 2010 El Nino is it was a weak El Nino and at the moment and what we're looking at is, if we do get an El Nino it will be a weak.


"It is also similar in the sense that the atmosphere didn't couple with the ocean until later on in October, that's yet to be seen of course, but they are the similarities."


"They're all different though, just because an El Nino is weak or strong, doesn't necessarily mean you're going to get the dry conditions."


Topics: weather, agribusiness, agricultural-crops, toowoomba-4350


More stories from Queensland
 

DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
TOM BAWDEN ENVIRONMENT EDITOR Wednesday 02 July 2014






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After steadily mounting speculation in recent weeks, the Met Office has confirmed that the world is almost certainly going to be struck by an El Nino event this year for the first time since 2009/10 – and probably by the end of the summer. The Independent looks at what this means for people around the world.


What is an El Nino phenomenon?


An El Nino event occurs when the prevailing trade winds that circulate over surface waters in the tropical pacific start to weaken. This allows the warm waters of the western pacific to wash back eastward, dragging precipitation with it, resulting in droughts in some countries and heavy rains in others.


How often do they occur?


Every two to seven years.


Are we definitely getting one this year?


Not definitely, but very likely indeed. The Met Office has said it's “probable”, while the United Nations forecasts an 80 per cent chance that we’ll get one by October and a 60 per cent likelihood that it could before August.





How worried should we be?


It depends where you live, but globally speaking the Met Office said an El Nino has the potential to induce “major climatic impacts”.


Where will be hardest hit?


India, Indonesia and Australia are likely to become much drier, increasing the chances of wildfires, lower crop production and rising food prices.


Meanwhile, the phenomenon precipitates heavier rainfall in the South American and eastern Pacific nations, raising the prospect of floods and landslides.


Overall, India is likely to suffer the most because El Nino increases the risk of a poor monsoon season by two to three times – potentially depriving the country of rains that are crucial to its crops and livelihoods.


Will the UK be affected?


Quite possibly, although as usual with the weather, it’s difficult to say for sure. The Met Office said El Nino increases the prospect of snow in the UK and contributed to the massive flurries seen last time the phenomenon visited in 2009/10. However, as only one of the factors influencing the weather, snow cannot be assured.


Rice fields in Tabanan, Bali, Indonesia. El Nino looms on the horizon which could lead into drought and lack of rainfall for the region


When was the worst El Nino?


The El Nino of 1997-8 caused deadly mudslides in South America, a crippling drought in South East Asia and extreme weather almost everywhere else. By contrast, the Met Office said the one it expects this year will be “weak to moderate” – similar to the last one in 2009/10.


Does El Nino always spell bad news?


Not always, no. For example, this time round it’s expected to bring much needed rain to the American west, which has been subjected to a severe drought in recent months.


Why El Nino?


The name is thought 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.


Any relation of La Nina?


Yes, they’re diametrically opposed brother and sister. 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.







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DR WHO

کاربر ويژه
WEATHER & EXTREME EVENTS
What Can We Expect from This Year's El Nino?
JUL 3, 2014 12:00 PM ET // BY PATRICK J. KIGER
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El Niño -- or to be precise, the El Niño Southern Oscillation, or ENSO -- is back, scientists say. So get set for some freaky stuff to happen around the world this summer and fall.


The U.S. government’s Climate Prediction Center now puts the chances of El Niño, which occurs naturally once or twice a decade, at 70 percent in the Northern Hemisphere this summer, and 80 percent during the fall and winter.


In the extreme weather phenomenon, the waters of the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of South America becomes abnormally warm, and moist rising water vapor forms thunderstorm clouds, which in turn cause the upper atmosphere to become warmer than usual too, according to this handy primer from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.


NEWS: Brace for Record Heat as El Niño Approaches
As that warm air branches out, it moves upward in altitude toward the poles and then sinks back into the tropics in loops that are called Hadley cells. All this change disrupts weather conditions across the planet, and that in turn tends to cause a cascade of weird and disturbing events, ranging from heavy rains and flooding to food shortages.


One 2011 study even found that El Niño was associated with an increased risk of civil war in tropical countries.


According to the center's latest forecast, the first warning signs were in March, when sea surface temperatures (SSTs) began to rise abnormally. Over the past four weeks, above-average SSTs have been observed across the Pacific Ocean, near Indonesia, and in the eastern Atlantic Ocean.


VIDEO: The Ocean Is in Danger
In a 2013 Nature article, researchers reported that the frequency of El Niño events is increasing due to climate change. If you remember lava lamps, you'll enjoy this psychedelic-like animation showing the day-to-day fluctuation of El Niño's equatorial temperature effects.


Photo: Satellite and sensor data indicate that El Niño conditions developing in the equatorial Pacific Ocean are similar in ways to those of May 1997, a year when the weather phenomenon was really potent. Credit: NOAA
 

Amir Mohsen

متخصص بخش هواشناسی
Peru says El Nino threat over, waters cooling and fish returning July 4, 2014 7:23 PM

















LIMA (Reuters) - The worst of the potentially disastrous weather pattern El Nino is now behind Peru and cooling sea temperatures are luring back schools of anchovy, the key ingredient in fishmeal, authorities said on Friday.
Temperatures in Peru's Pacific peaked in June, rising 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 Fahrenheit) above average levels, but have since retreated and will likely return to normal by August, the state committee that studies El Nino said.
"The possibility of us seeing an extraordinary Nino is ruled out," said German Vasquez, the head of the committee.
Peru is the world's top fishmeal exporter, producing about a third of worldwide supply. The industry is concentrated along the South American country's northern and central coast.
Cold-water anchovy that swam south to escape warmer sea temperatures that arrived in April are making their way back now, Vasquez said.
"Anchovy are coming north," Vasquez said. "There are already fish in the center of the country, but they're still very close to the coast and not yet at their usual depth."
El Nino, characterized by a warming of surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, can trigger floods in some places and droughts in others.
Vasquez said sea temperatures off Peru's coast could rise again slightly at the end of the year.
(Reporting By Teresa Cespedes; Editing by David Gregorio)
 
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