Daily News (Los Angeles)

La Niña has ended, El Niño may be on the way

- By Livia Albeck-Ripka The New York Times

La Niña, the climate pattern that helped fuel the extremely active hurricane seasons and drought in the southwest over the past 2 ½ years, has ended, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion said Thursday.

The intermitte­nt phenomenon — which occurs when sea-surface temperatur­es in the equatorial Pacific Ocean are below average — typically brings drier, warmer conditions to the southern half of the United States and wetter weather to the northern half. The last La Niña began in September 2020.

But last month, sea-surface temperatur­es in that part of the ocean rose, scientists say, signaling the end of La Niña and the start of a new neutral climate pattern (this occurs when the sea-surface temperatur­es are at or near average). But this neutral period may be short-lived: By summer, rising seasurface temperatur­es could lead the opposing El Niño pattern to develop, according to NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center. By the fall, forecaster­s believe, there is a 62% chance El Niño will form.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on has also said that a warming El Nino event may develop in the coming months, bringing with it another spike in global temperatur­es that had been kept partly at bay by La Nina’s cooling effect.

La Niña and El Niño are the opposite phases of what is called the El Nino-Southern Oscillatio­n, or ENSO. During an El Nino period, it can be drier and warmer than usual in the northern United States, and wetter and more likely to flood along the U.S. Gulf Coast and in the Southeast. Previous El Niños have helped unleash rain in California, fires in the tropics and floods in the southern United States.

So what does all of this mean for what is in store across the United States for the rest of the year? Scientists say that it can be hard to predict, and that it is unclear what impact climate change might be having on weather patterns.

“The old La Niña playbook and the old El Niño playbook don’t seem to be as reliable as they used to be,” said Jan Null, an adjunct professor of meteorolog­y at San Jose State University. But, he added, you would typically expect the southern tier of the United States to be wetter than normal, and the Pacific Northwest to be drier than normal.

Philip Klotzbach, a meteorolog­ist with Colorado State University, has anticipate­d that El Niño could help to reduce the severity of this year’s Atlantic hurricane season by increasing rapid changes in wind velocity and direction, which, he said on Twitter, “tears apart hurricanes.”

An El Niño pattern, which sends warm water surging from the west to the east side of the Pacific Ocean, can also increase the risk of flooding and coastal erosion in Southern California, as well as beach hazards like debris washing ashore and rip currents, scientists say.

The weather pattern can also affect marine life off the Pacific Coast, halting or weakening a process known as upwelling, which brings water and nutrients to the surface of the ocean, according to NOAA. This can have an effect on phytoplank­ton, fish and other marine life. The warmer waters may also draw tropical species into areas that are normally too cold.

 ?? SCOTT MCINTYRE — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The remains of a pier on Fort Myers Beach, Fla., last month. La Niña, the climate pattern that helped fuel the extremely active hurricane seasons and drought in the southwest over the past 21⁄2years, has ended, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion said Thursday.
SCOTT MCINTYRE — THE NEW YORK TIMES The remains of a pier on Fort Myers Beach, Fla., last month. La Niña, the climate pattern that helped fuel the extremely active hurricane seasons and drought in the southwest over the past 21⁄2years, has ended, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion said Thursday.

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