The Telegram (St. John's)

El Nino is back but it’s late, weak and probably no big deal

- SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON – An El Nino, which can alter weather worldwide, has formed but it’s so weak and late that it shouldn’t be a big deal, U.S. forecaster­s said.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion announced last week that the climate feature formed in the central Pacific, but forecaster­s don’t expect it to last more than three or four months.

An El Nino is a natural warming of the ocean that once it interacts with the atmosphere often warms up the globe and changes rainfall and temperatur­e patterns, making some places wetter and some places drier.

When there is an El Nino, there are generally fewer and weaker hurricanes in the Atlantic, but this one might not make it to summer and have any effect on the next storm season, said Mike Halpert, deputy director for the NOAA’S Climate Prediction Center.

A wintertime El Nino often means more rain for the U.S. South and Southern California, but this is late in the season and it’s already rainy there, Halpert said.

The current El Nino is quite different than the last one in 2016, which was one of the strongest meteorolog­ists have seen and helped push Earth to its warmest year on record.

This year’s version is “kind of limping along,” Halpert said. So, he and other scientists said they don’t expect many significan­t effects.

Forecaster­s had been waiting for it since last June when NOAA issued its first El Nino watch. But while the water was warmer than normal in the Pacific, it wasn’t causing the changes in the air that would satisfy the definition for El Nino.

During stronger past El Ninos, the U.S. economy has benefited because of less drought and fewer hurricanes, economic studies show.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? People walk on the Cote Basque beach in Biarritz, southweste­rn France Feb. 14. Temperatur­es in southweste­rn France rose to an unusual 20 C.
AP PHOTO People walk on the Cote Basque beach in Biarritz, southweste­rn France Feb. 14. Temperatur­es in southweste­rn France rose to an unusual 20 C.

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