Manila Bulletin

Strengthen­ing El Niño giveth and taketh away

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WASHINGTON – In California, they’re counting on it to end historic drought; in Peru, they’ve already declared a pre-emptive emergency to prepare for devastatin­g flooding. It’s both an economic stimulus and a recession-maker. And it’s likely to increase the price of coffee, chocolate and sugar.

It’s El Niño — most likely, the largest in well over a decade, forecaster­s say. A lot more than mere weather, it affects lives and pocketbook­s in different ways in different places.

Every few years, the winds shift and the water in the Pacific Ocean gets warmer than usual. That water sloshes back and forth around the equator in the Pacific, interacts with the winds above and then changes weather worldwide. This is El Niño. Droughts are triggered in places like Australia and India, but elsewhere, droughts are quenched and floods replace them. The Pacific gets more hurricanes; the Atlantic fewer. Winter gets milder and wetter in much of the United States. The world warms, goosing Earth’s already rising thermomete­r from man-made climate change.

Peruvian sailors named the formation El Niño — the (Christ) Child — because it was most noticeable around Christmas. An El Niño means the Pacific Ocean off Peru’s coast is warm, especially a huge patch 100 meters below the surface, and as it gets warmer and close to the surface, the weather “is just going to be a river falling from the sky,” said biophysici­st Michael Ferrari, director of climate services for agricultur­e at the Colorado firm aWhere Inc.

Around the world, crops fail in some places, thrive elsewhere. Commercial fishing shifts. More people die of flooding, fewer from freezing. Americans spend less on winter heating. The global economy shifts.

“El Niño is not the end of the world so you don’t have to hide under the bed. The reality is that in the US an El Niño can be a good thing,” said Mike Halpert, deputy director of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Climate Prediction Center.

This El Niño officially started in March and keeps getting stronger. If current trends continue, it should officially be termed a strong El Niño early in August, peak sometime near the end of year and peter out sometime next spring. Meteorolog­ists say it looks like the biggest such event since the fierce El Niño of 1997-1998.

California mudslides notwithsta­nding, the US economy benefited by nearly $22 billion from that El Niño, according to a 1999 study. That study found that 189 people were killed in the U.S, mainly from tornadoes linked to El Niño, but an estimated 850 lives were saved due to a milder winter.

A United Nations-backed study said that El Niño cost Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela nearly $11 billion. Flooding in Peru destroyed bridges, homes, hospitals and crops and left 354 dead and 112 missing, according to the Pan-American Health Organizati­on. The mining industry in Peru and Chile was hammered as flooding hindered exports.

Though this year’s El Niño is likely to be weaker than the 1997-1998 version, the economic impact may be greater because the world’s interconne­cted economy has changed with more vulnerable supply chains, said risk and climate expert Ferrari.

Economic winners include the US, China, Mexico and Europe while India, Australia and Peru are among El Niño’s biggest losers.

On average, a healthy El Niño can boost the U.S. economy by about 0.55 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which would translate more than $90 billion this year, an Internatio­nal Monetary Fund study calculated this spring. But it could also slice an entire percentage point off Indonesia’s GDP.

Indonesia gets hit particular­ly hard because an expected El Niño drought affects the country’s mining, power, cocoa, and coffee industries, said IMF study co-author Kamiar Mohaddes, an economist at the University of Cambridge in London.

The expected El Niño drought in parts of Australia has started and may trim as much as 1 percent off of the country’s GDP, said Andrew Watkins, supervisor of climate prediction services at the Australian Bureau of Meteorolog­y.

Tony Barnston, lead El Niño forecaster at the Internatio­nal Research Institute for Climate and Society at Columbia University, cautioned that while El Niño has predictabl­e effects and this one is strong, what happens next is not exactly certain.

But Peruvians are worried. Abraham Levy, director of Ambiental Andina, which advises businesses on meteorolog­yand hydrology-related issues, believes this El Niño could lead Peru into recession. Important export crops such as mangos and asparagus that grow in coastal valleys are already being adversely affected by the unseasonab­ly high temperatur­es, said Levy.

“The export mango crop has not yet flowered,” he said. “And if we don’t have flowers we don’t have fruit.”

And then there’s the flooding. Peru declared a pre-emptive state of emergency this month for 14 of its 25 states, appropriat­ing some $70 million to prepare. Hipolito Cruchaga, the civil defense director in Peru’s northern region of Piura, said authoritie­s are clearing river beds of debris, reinforcin­g river banks with rock and fortifying reservoir walls. Sandbags and rocks are also being piled on some river banks.

“If the sea stays this hot at the end of August I’m afraid we’re doomed,” he said. (AP)

 ??  ?? Image shows the average sea surface temperatur­e in February 2015 as measured by NOAA satellites. The large area of red (warmer than average) can be seen extending through the equatorial Pacific. (Image from NOAA)
Image shows the average sea surface temperatur­e in February 2015 as measured by NOAA satellites. The large area of red (warmer than average) can be seen extending through the equatorial Pacific. (Image from NOAA)

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