Gulf Today

Changing rainfall patterns warms oceans

- Meena Janardhan

Changing rainfall patterns may be accelerati­ng the warming of the oceans in India and in many other parts of the globe. Scientists from the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y (IITM) have found a link between warming of the Indo-pacific Ocean and changing rainfall patterns.

In a study published in the journal Nature, the researcher­s from the IITM, Ministry of Earth Sciences, Pune, report a two-fold expansion of the Indo-pacific warm pool — the largest expanse of the warmest ocean temperatur­es on Earth. They find that the expansion of this warm pool has altered the most dominant mode of weather fluctuatio­n originatin­g in the tropics, known as the Madden Julian Oscillatio­n (MJO). This warming of the Indo-pacific Ocean is occurring due to man-made emissions. Over north India, the impact is reduction of rainfall during the winter-spring season (November–april).

Another study by researcher­s from the Indian Institute of Science warned that as much as 55% of glaciers in the Sutlej basin may disappear by 2050 and 97% by 2090, under extreme climate change scenarios. Using ice thickness of glaciers as the basis, scientists also estimated that glaciers in the Hindu Kush Himalayas might contain 27% less ice than previously suggested.

The tropical Indian Ocean is warming at a faster rate compared to other tropical oceans. The warming trends show a basin-scale surface warming with peak warming in the central equatorial Indian Ocean. This warming is favourable for weakening the monsoon Hadley circulatio­n and strengthen­ing the trade winds in the Pacific.

These changes in the MJO behaviour have increased the rainfall over northern Australia, west Pacific, Amazon basin, southwest Africa and southeast Asia (Indonesia, Philippine­s and Papua New Guinea). At the same time these changes have brought a decline in rainfall over central Pacific, along the west and east coast of United States (e.g., California), north India, east Africa, and the Yangtze basin in China.

The MJO is characteri­sed by a band of rain clouds moving eastward over the tropics. The MJO regulates tropical cyclones, the monsoons, and the El Nino cycle — and occasional­ly contribute­s to severe weather events over Asia, Australia, Africa, Europe and the Americas. The MJO travels a stretch of 12,000–20,000 kms over the tropical oceans, mainly over the Indo-pacific warm pool, which has ocean temperatur­es generally warmer than 28°C.

The study points out that though the entire Indo-pacific has warmed, the warmest waters are over the west Pacific, creating a temperatur­e contrast that drives moisture from the Indian Ocean to the west Pacific Maritime Continent, enhancing the cloud formation there. As a result, the lifecycle of MJO has changed. The residence time of MJO clouds have shortened over the Indian Ocean by 4 days (from an average of 19 days to 15 days). Over the west Pacific, it increased by 5 days (from an average of 16 days to 23 days). It is this change in the residence time of MJO clouds that has altered the weather patterns across the globe.

The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) highlights the fact that the ocean absorbs most of the excess heat from greenhouse gas emissions, leading to rising ocean temperatur­es. Increasing ocean temperatur­es affect marine species and ecosystems. Rising temperatur­es cause coral bleaching and the loss of breeding grounds for marine fishes and mammals. Rising ocean temperatur­es also affect the benefits humans derive from the ocean – threatenin­g food security, increasing the prevalence of diseases and causing more extreme weather events and the loss of coastal protection.

The Fifth Assessment Report published by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) in 2013 revealed that the ocean had absorbed more than 93% of the excess heat from greenhouse gas emissions since the 1970s. This is causing ocean temperatur­es to rise.

Data from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA) shows that the average global sea surface temperatur­e – the temperatur­e of the upper few metres of the ocean – has increased by approximat­ely 0.13°C per decade over the past 100 years.

Experts stress that achieving the mitigation targets set by the Paris Agreement on climate change and limiting the global average temperatur­e increase to well below 2°C above pre-industrial levels is crucial to prevent the massive, irreversib­le impacts of ocean warming on marine ecosystems and their services. Establishi­ng marine protected areas and putting in place adaptive measures, such as precaution­ary catch limits to prevent overfishin­g, can protect ocean ecosystems and shield humans from the effects of ocean warming.

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