San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

El Niño forms early, stronger in boost to global warming

- By Seth Borenstein and Isabella O’Malley

An early bird El Niño has officially formed, likely to be strong, warp weather worldwide and give an already warming Earth an extra kick of natural heat, meteorolog­ists announced.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion Thursday issued an El Niño advisory, announcing the arrival of the climatic condition. It may not quite be like the others.

It formed a month or two earlier than most El Niños do, which “gives it room to grow,” and there’s a 56 percent chance it will be considered strong and a 25 percent chance it reaches supersized levels, said climate scientist Michelle L’Heureux, head of NOAA’s El Niño/La Niña forecast office.

“If this El Niño tips into the largest class of events ... it will be the shortest recurrence time in the historical record,” said Kim Cobb, a climate scientist at Brown University. Such a short gap between El Niños leaves communitie­s with less time to recover from damages to infrastruc­ture, agricultur­e, and ecosystems like coral reefs.

Usually, an El Niño mutes hurricane activity in the Atlantic, giving relief to coastal areas in states from Texas to New England, Central America and the Caribbean, weary from recent record busy years. But this time, forecaster­s don’t see that happening, because of record hot Atlantic temperatur­es that would counteract El Niño winds that normally decapitate storms.

Hurricanes strengthen and grow when they travel over warm seawater, and the tropical regions of the Atlantic Ocean are “exceptiona­lly warm,” said Kristopher Karnauskas, associate professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. So this year, NOAA and others are predicting a near-average Atlantic hurricane season.

In the past, a strong El Niño has led to record global warmth, like in 2016 and 1998. Scientists earlier this year had been saying next year is more likely to set a record heat, especially because El Niños usually reach peak power in winter. But this El Niño started even earlier than usual.

“The onset of El Niño has implicatio­ns for placing 2023 in the running for warmest year on record when combined with climate-warming background,” said University of Georgia meteorolog­y professor Marshall Shepherd.

An El Niño is a natural, temporary and occasional warming of part of the Pacific that shifts weather patterns across the globe, often by moving the airborne paths for storms. The world earlier this year got out of an unusually long-lasting and strong La Niña — El Niño’s flip side with cooling — that exacerbate­d drought in the U.S. West and augmented Atlantic hurricane season.

What this in some ways means is that some of the wild weather of the past three years — such as drought in places — will flip the opposite way.

“If you’ve been suffering three years of a profound drought like in South America, then a tilt toward wet might be a welcome to developmen­t,” L’Heureux said. “You don’t want flooding, but certainly there are portions of the world that may benefit from the onset of El Niño.”

For the next few months, during the northern summer, El Niño will most be felt in the Southern Hemisphere with “minimal impacts” in North America, L’Heureux said.

El Niño strongly tilts Australia toward drier and warmer conditions with northern South America — Brazil, Colombia and Venezuela — likely to be drier and Southeast Argentina and parts of Chile likely to be wetter, she said. India and Indonesia also tend to be dry through August in El Niños.

El Niño hits hardest in December through February, shifting the winter storm track farther south to the equator.

The entire southern third to half of the United States, including California, is likely to be wetter in El Niño. For years, California was looking for El Niño rain relief from a decades long megadrough­t, but this winter’s seemingly endless atmospheri­c rivers made it no longer needed, she said.

The U.S. Pacific Northwest and parts of the Ohio Valley can go dry and warm, L’Heureux said.

The United States also faces hazards from El Niño

despite some benefits. Azhar Ehsan, associate research scientist at Columbia University, noted that the increased rainfall in California, Oregon, and Washington heightens the risk of landslides and flash flooding in these areas.

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