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Is there another El Niño on the Horizon?

El Niño and La Niña

7 December 2018, www.esa.int

The European Space Agency and other authorities say the jury is still out as to whether climate change will lead to stronger El Niño events, but while representatives from around 200 countries at the COP24 conference are working to breathe life into the 2105 Paris Agreement, there is a 75–80% chance that a fully-fledged event could be with us in the next couple of months.

El Niño and its cooler cousin, La Niña, are complex naturally occurring climatic phenomena – and nobody really knows if our changing climate will affect them.
El Niño and La Niña are opposite phases of what is known as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation and occur at irregular intervals of between two and seven years.

As the animation above shows, the first signs of an El Niño are a weakening of the Trade Winds and warmer than usual sea-surface temperatures in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. This not only affects fisheries off the coast of South America, but leads to a disruption in weather patterns around the world.

These changing weather patterns can cause heatwaves, drought, wildfires and flooding in different places.

Often, a year after an El Niño, the pendulum swings back and La Niña occurs when the Trade Winds strengthen and surface waters cool in the tropical Pacific Ocean.

According to the World Meteorological Organization there is a 75–80% chance of a fully-fledged El Niño starting within the next couple of months.

Satellite measurements are essential to help predict El Niño and to monitor the effects of an event.

For example, thermal infrared sensors in the Copernicus Sentinel-3 satellites’ sea and land surface temperature radiometer measure changes in the temperature of the sea-surface.

Also, by profiling Earth’s wind, ESA’s newly-launched Aeolus missions is expected to help predict these events.

While scientists know that El Niño contributes to an increase in global temperatures, they don’t know if rising global and ocean temperatures can, in turn, intensify El Niño.

In time, it is hoped that satellites orbiting above will help solve this puzzle, but in the meantime they are key to predicting and monitoring events on the horizon.

 



     
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