San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

EXPERTS: LA NIÑA MAY WORSEN SOUTHWEST DROUGHT IN WINTER

Forecaster­s warn of increased fire danger as a result

- THE NEW YORK TIMES

Climate forecaster­s said Thursday that the world had entered La Niña, the opposite phase of the climate pattern that also brings El Niño and affects weather across the globe. Among other impacts, La Niña has the potential this winter to worsen what are already severe drought conditions in the American Southwest.

The Climate Prediction Center, a part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, said in its monthly forecast that sea-surface temperatur­es in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean had cooled, signifying La Niña conditions, and that there was a 75 percent likelihood that La Niña would continue through the winter.

Like El Niño, which results from warmer-thannormal ocean temperatur­es in the tropical Pacific, La Niña occurs every two to seven years on average. And like El Niño, it leads to changes in atmospheri­c circulatio­n that can affect weather in unconnecte­d parts of the world.

La Niña’s strongest influence is usually felt in winter. And while the precise effects are unpredicta­ble, La Niña can result in warmer and drier conditions across the southern United States and cooler conditions in southeaste­rn Alaska, the northern Plains and western and central Canada. It can also lead to a wetter winter in the Pacific Northwest.

Mike Halpert, deputy director of the Climate Prediction Center, said that as a result of La Niña, Southern California, as well as most of Arizona and New Mexico, could “tilt toward dry” this winter.

Southern California, which gets most of its rainfall from late fall to early spring, is already abnormally dry, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.

“We’re already in a bad position, and La Niña puts us in a situation where fireweathe­r conditions persist into November and possibly even December,” said Ryan Truchelut, president of Weather Tiger LLC. “It is exacerbati­ng existing heat and drought issues.”

The effects are already evident. Rising temperatur­es and an extreme megadrough­t across the U.S. West are fueling fires from Washington to Arizona. California is having its worst fire season on record, torching an unpreceden­ted 2.5 million acres.

But La Niña can have effects around the globe. The most consistent impact is in Indonesia, which usually sees increased rainfall. La Niña can also lead to dry conditions in eastern China and east Africa, and cool and wet conditions in southern Africa and southeaste­rn Brazil.

NOAA scientists said this summer that the decreasing sea-surface temperatur­es in the tropical Pacific were a factor in their prediction that the North Atlantic hurricane season would be an active one. La Niña influences atmospheri­c conditions in the North Atlantic that would otherwise tend to disrupt hurricanes as they form.

In the Atlantic, a record number of tropical storms had formed by September, including Hurricane Laura, which killed more than a dozen people across the Caribbean and the U.S. last month.

Emily Becker, associate director of the Cooperativ­e Institute for Marine and Atmospheri­c Studies at the University of Miami, said that since the last El Niño ended in 2019, ocean temperatur­es in the tropical Pacific had been “neutral,” neither abnormally warm or cool. But that began to change this summer. “We saw some pretty substantia­l easterly winds,” she said. “It might have cooled a little faster than we would have expected, but not radically so.”

These west-to-east trade winds cooled the ocean surface and also led to upwelling of deep, colder water to the surface, Becker said.

The resulting shift of warmer water to the western tropical Pacific affects the jet stream, the high-altitude river of air that moves west to east and serves to separate colder and warmer air. It is this change in the jet stream that can modify the North American winter, Becker said.

El Niño affects the jet stream, too, although in different ways, and leads to changes that are often the opposite of La Niña’s, including wetter conditions across the Southern United States. El Niño tends to last longer than La Niña as well. Becker said current models suggested that this La Niña would not persist through the spring.

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 ?? JAY L. CLENDENIN LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Surfers wait for waves in Manhattan Beach Tuesday. Experts say the world has entered a La Niña phase.
JAY L. CLENDENIN LOS ANGELES TIMES Surfers wait for waves in Manhattan Beach Tuesday. Experts say the world has entered a La Niña phase.

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