Daily News (Los Angeles)

Unwanted guest: Nasty La Nina keeps popping up

- By Seth Borenstein

NEW YORK >> Something weird is up with La Nina, the natural but potent weather event linked to more drought and wildfires in the western United States and more Atlantic hurricanes. It's becoming the nation's unwanted weather guest and meteorolog­ists said the West's megadrough­t won't go away until La Nina does.

The current double-dip La Nina set a record for strength last month and is forecast to likely be around for a rare but not quite unpreceden­ted third straight winter.

And it's not just this one. Scientists are noticing that in the past 25 years the world seems to be getting more La Ninas than it used to and that is just the opposite of what their best computer model simulation­s say should be happening with human-caused climate change.

“They (La Ninas) don't know when to leave,” said Michelle L'Heureux, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion forecast office for La Nina and its more famous flip side, El Nino.

An Associated Press statistica­l analysis of winter La Ninas show that they used to happen about 28% of the time from 1950 to 1999, but in the past 25 winters, they've been brewing nearly half the time. There's a small chance that this effect could be random, but if the La Nina sticks around this winter, as forecast, that would push the trend over the statistica­lly significan­t line, which is key in science, said L'Heureux. Her own analysis shows that La Nina-like conditions are occurring more often in the last 40 years. Other new studies are showing similar patterns.

What's bothering many scientists is that their goto climate simulation models that tend to get conditions right over the rest of the globe predict more El Ninos, not La Ninas, and that's causing contention in the climate community about what to believe, according to Columbia University climate scientist Richard Seager and MIT hurricane scientist Kerry Emanuel.

What Seager and other scientists said is happening is that the eastern equatorial Atlantic is not warming as fast as the western equatorial Atlantic or even the rest of the world with climate change. And it's not the amount of warming that matters but the difference between the west and east. The more the difference, the more likely a La Nina, the less the difference, the more likely an El Nino.

Scientists speculate it could be related to another natural cycle, called the Pacific Decadal Oscillatio­n, or it could be caused by human-caused climate change or both.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Flames lick up a tree as the Windy Fire burns in the Trail of 100Giants grove in Sequoia National Forest last September.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Flames lick up a tree as the Windy Fire burns in the Trail of 100Giants grove in Sequoia National Forest last September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States