The Hamilton Spectator

El Niño to bring warmth west, cooler weather east: forecast

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

A summer forecast warns western wildfires will likely continue to be “a major concern,” with higherthan-normal temperatur­es expected when the second fire season ramps up in July and peaks in August.

The Weather Network released prediction­s Wednesday that point to a cooler season overall in Canada, although there will likely be periods of hot and dry stretches broken up by unsettled weather in June, July and August.

While residents in the East can expect a relatively cooler summer, chief meteorolog­ist Chris Scott said those out West will see warmerthan-normal temperatur­es, with near normal precipitat­ion in British Columbia and Alberta.

British Columbia is typically dry during these months, even with normal rainfall, he added when reached by phone in Hamilton.

“This doesn’t look like a bone-dry summer in terms of precipitat­ion but then it all depends on where the rains fall and when they come,” said Scott, adding there’s cautious optimism much-needed rain will arrive in the heart of summer.

“It’s not the worst possible scenario when we look at this forecast. But it’s also not wonderful news.”

He said the biggest driver affecting the forecast is the expectatio­n global weather patterns are about to rapidly shift from three years of La Niña-driven weather to “a rather significan­t El Niño event.”

Scott said the scorching temperatur­es of recent summers — especially in the larger cities of southern Ontario and Quebec — will likely veer into relatively fresher climes as the opposing weather phenomena swap. Central Canada will likely see fewer days of 30 C temperatur­es than many recent summers.

El Niño occurs when surface waters in parts of the Pacific Ocean warm and push east, toward the west coast of the Americas, causing changes in the jet stream across the Pacific.

It’s a reversal of what we’ve seen for the past three years with La Niña, which brought cold water to the coast of South America while warm water moved to the west.

“We like to think of it as the engine that drives the global weather patterns,” Scott said of the Pacific Ocean. “It drives where the jet stream is, and that in turn drives where the warm and cool air is, where our storms form.”

Scott said lingering effects from La Niña will include periods of hot weather, especially across Western Canada, but conditions elsewhere will be more changeable. “It looks like a cooler summer for much of Eastern Canada. Western Canada, we still think we’ve got some warmer-than-normal weather in store, but not as scorching as we’ve seen some years,” said Scott. “And that’s because this El Niño is coming on stronger than initially expected and that in turn causes these shifts in the global weather patterns.”

The forecast does not suggest a very active fire season for northern Manitoba and northern Ontario because of below-normal temperatur­es, although it predicts belownorma­l precipitat­ion.

The Prairies can expect “a very warm summer,” especially in western parts, while cooler weather heads to eastern parts and drought and wildfire smoke will continue to be a concern.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People enjoy the cool water of the Humber River on a warm, sunny Monday in Toronto.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS People enjoy the cool water of the Humber River on a warm, sunny Monday in Toronto.

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