Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Freak weather, odd rain pattern due to global climate crisis

- Jayashree Nandi and Snehal Fernandes letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: Scientists have for the first time linked a specific phenomenon brought on by the climate crisis to reduced winter rain in India -- a growing patch of warm seas in the IndoPacifi­c ocean region that is causing droughts in some regions across the world and extreme floods in others.

In a report published on Wednesday, climate scientists pointed out that the Indo-Pacific warm pool, a stretch of ocean where the temperatur­e remains above 28°C in the winter months, has doubled in size between 1981 ans 2018. This, in turn, has “warped” the Madden-Julian Oscillatio­n (MJO), a band of rain clouds that moves eastwards over the tropics and is responsibl­e for most weather variations in the region -- including the south-west and north-east monsoons.

The study, published in the journal Nature and authored by scientists from Pune’s Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorolog­y (IITM), United States’s

National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, University of Washington and University of Tokyo, said that the changes to MJO have a cascading effect that triggers extreme weather events across the globe.

The MJO season begins in October and lasts till April, and the report contends its “warping” has a direct link to lower rainfall in the winter months in north India. Experts separately say the effects also spill over to the summer monsoon,which is crucial for India’s agricultur­e and economy.

The landmark study comes less than a week before 197 countries gather for the UN Climate Conference (COP25) in Madrid to negotiate on rules around the functionin­g of carbon markets, how vulnerable countries can be compensate­d for the loss caused by climate impact, and to decide on how findings of Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC’s) 2019 report on land and oceans can be taken on board.

“The MJO location-specific changes in terms of their lifespan has altered weather patterns across the globe because it changes atmospheri­c circulatio­n that can enhance or suppress tropical rainfall variabilit­y, modulate or trigger extreme weather events including hurricanes, droughts, flooding, heat waves and cold surges,” said Roxy Mathew Koll, principal investigat­or and climate scientist, IITM.

Previous studies have establishe­d that an increase in greenhouse gas emissions due to human activities has led to the warming of the Indo-Pacific pool, the study noted.

The study looked at climate model simulation­s between 1981 and 2018 and found that MJO clouds now remain in Indian Ocean for four fewer days (from an average of 19 days to 15 days). In turn, they have spilled over to the west Pacific region, where they linger for five more days (from an average of 18 days to 23 days).

MJO travels 12,000-20,000km mainly over the Indo-Pacific warm pool and modulates the El Niño Southern Oscillatio­n, tropical cyclones and the monsoons, contributi­ng to severe weather events over Asia, Australia, Africa, Europe and the Americas.

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