El Niño: what does it mean for Australia – and are more heatwaves and bushfires inevitable?

The Guardian

El Niño: what does it mean for Australia – and are more heatwaves and bushfires inevitable?

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The UN has declared the world to be in the grip of the weather pattern but Australian scientists are not so sure. Why the uncertainty? The UNs weather agency warned this past week the world was now in the grip of an El Nino that would likely see a surge in global temperatures and disruptive weather and climate patterns around the planet. The World Meteorological Organizations declaration followed that of the US governments National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration , which has also said the phenomenon is now set in place in the tropical Pacific. In Australia, El Ninos have tended to increase the risks of drought, heatwaves, bushfires and coral bleaching. But despite the WMO and Noaas confidence, the Bureau of Meteorology is still not convinced an El Nino is in place. So why the difference of opinion? And if an El Nino does strike, what might be in store? El Nino deserves attention because it influences climates around the globe, from droughts in Australia and Indonesia and failed monsoons in India, to extreme rainfall in the southern US. There are two key elements of an El Nino. Warmer than average temperatures at the surface in the equatorial Pacific that then kickstart events in the atmosphere. The ocean has said were ready to go, but the atmosphere hasnt quite come to the party yet, says Dr Jaci Brown, research director at CSIROs Climate Science Centre . For the Bureau to declare an El Nino, sea surface temperatures in a central region of the equatorial Pacific ( known technically as Nino 3.4 ) have to be 0.8C above average a higher threshold than the 0.5C used by Noaa. Both those thresholds have been met. But Dr Shayne McGregor, an associate professor at Monash University and expert on El Nino and La Nina cycles, says Noaa and the WMO give more weight to ocean temperatures than the Bureau. The Bureau wants to see a coupling between the ocean and the atmosphere, he says. El Nino is a coupled phenomenon and the impacts are communicated through the atmosphere. Sign up for Guardian Australias free morning and afternoon email newsletters for your daily news roundup In WMOs declaration, the UN agency did say some uncertainty remains because the relationship between ocean temperatures and the atmosphere was only weak, even though it said this coupling was crucial for the amplification and sustenance of El Nino. During an El Nino, the warmer surface waters disrupt a pattern of winds and updrafts in the Pacific known as the Walker circulation. The trade winds that blow from east to west and form the bottom of this circulation weaken, or even reverse. To test whether the atmosphere is reacting to the warmer ocean temperatures, the bureau monitors the difference in atmospheric pressure between Tahiti an island in the central Pacific and Darwin. This measure known as the southern oscillation index should see persistent higher pressure over Darwin and lower pressure over Tahiti. Bureau climatologist Zhi-Weng Chua says an SOI of -7 or greater is associated with an El Nino. But while the average over the past 90 days was -5.9, the SOI had jumped back in the most recent 30 days to +3.6. A network of buoys and satellite datasets also gave information about the Walker circulation. Chua says: Even the latest data we have on the trade winds over June shows them close to average. We are seeing no evidence of a signal in the trade winds. They look neutral. None of this means an El Nino wont eventuate, but Chua says it is unusual to have such strong warming in the central Pacific without the atmosphere responding. Sign up to Afternoon Update Our Australian afternoon update breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you whats happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion McGregor is still on the fence about whether an El Nino will eventuate and points to 2012 and 2014 when the Pacific also looked primed for El Ninos that didnt happen. Theres this buildup of heat and its pre-conditioned for El Nino. But Im still 50/50, he says. But McGregor and other experts stress the impacts of an El Nino on Australia differ from one event to the next. He says: But the chances of a wetter than normal year during an El Nino are almost non-existent. That means youre left with a normal or drier year. Experts have said the impacts on Australia from an El Nino can also depend on where the warmest water in the Pacific is located. Central Pacific El Ninos tend to mean drier conditions for Australia than El Ninos situated further east. Brown says no two El Ninos are the same, but they do tell you which way to lean, but not which way to jump. Around the globe, sea surface temperatures have been at record levels since late March. The oceans have absorbed about 90% of the extra heat caused mostly by burning fossil fuels and deforestation. Last month a study led by CSIRO scientists said global heating had likely been making El Nino and La Nina events more frequent and more extreme since the 1960s. Brown thinks the changed climate and the extra heat could be interfering with the current conditions in the Pacific, making El Nino harder to predict. Climate change means were now living in a world weve never experienced before and so the rules we have always lived by we dont know if they still apply, she says. Our understanding of El Nino is based on a different climate state. Thats contributing to the uncertainty of what this year will bring. Climate change puts a new lens on everything. Our rules of thumb dont necessarily apply any more. It takes away some of the certainty that we used to have about how El Nino is formed. So a more pressing change is climate change. That means hotter conditions and drier, and then when rainfall does come its more intense. We have to prepare for that every year, regardless of El Nino or La Nina.