The Guardian Australia

BoM declares the El Niño is over and another La Niña could be on the way

- Peter Hannam

The Bureau of Meteorolog­y has declared the El Niño weather event of 2023-24 to be over, with odds increasing that its cooler counterpar­t, the La Niña, will return by the coming spring.

Conditions in the central equatorial Pacific have now returned to neutral conditions, about seven months after the El Niño had got under way, the bureau said on Tuesday.

For Australia, an El Niño typically delivers below-average rainfall for much of the country’s east, while La Niñas are associated with wetter than usual weather for northern and eastern parts during the winter-spring period, the bureau said. August to October was Australia’s driest three-month period ever recorded by the bureau.

The El Niño-Southern Oscillatio­n – which gauges air pressure difference­s between Darwin and Tahiti – is one of the key drivers affecting global climate.

“Internatio­nal climate models suggest ENSO is likely to continue to remain neutral until at least July 2024,” the bureau said, adding the main climate models it uses are predicting a La Niña may form by spring if not before.

Should a La Niña get under way later this year it would be the fourth such event in the past five years. Such a sequence – of three La Niñas followed by an El Niño and La Niña – hasn’t been recorded previously, Cai Wenju, a former senior CSIRO researcher, told Guardian Australia earlier this year.

Other agencies have also been forecastin­g the possibilit­y of a La Niña event later this year. The US’s National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, for instance, last week put the odds of a La Niña at about 85% although its thresholds are slightly lower than the bureau’s.

La Niñas typically see a strengthen­ing of the easterly equatorial winds, shifting rainfall patterns towards Australia and south-east Asia. The number of cyclones affecting Australia are usually above average during La Niña years.

The Pacific tends to absorb more warmth than during El Niño years, exacerbati­ng the background warming from climate change.

“Global sea surface temperatur­es (SSTs) have been the warmest on record for each month between April 2023 and March 2024,” the bureau said. “Month-to-date data for April 2024 indicates this month is tracking warmer than April 2023.”

The bureau noted that prediction­s made in mid-autumn “tend to have lower accuracy than prediction­s made at other times of the year. This means that current forecasts of the ENSO state beyond July should be used with caution”.

That run of record-breaking heat might also add to the uncertaint­y about how conditions evolve in the Pacific and the resulting weather impacts.

“The global pattern of warmth is affecting the typical historical global pattern of sea surface temperatur­es associated with ENSO variabilit­y,” it said. “As the current global ocean conditions have not been observed before, inferences of how ENSO may develop in 2024 that are based on past events may not be reliable.”

 ?? Photograph: Darren England/AAP ?? A water-bombing helicopter fights a bushfire in Queensland in November. The Bureau of Meteorolog­y says the 2023-24 El Niño weather event is over.
Photograph: Darren England/AAP A water-bombing helicopter fights a bushfire in Queensland in November. The Bureau of Meteorolog­y says the 2023-24 El Niño weather event is over.

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