Expert discusses La Niña and El Niño cycles effects on Australia

Posted: January 7, 2023 by oldbrew in Cycles, ENSO, modelling, Natural Variation, Ocean dynamics, predictions, weather
Tags: ,


The last El Niño was 6-7 years ago, but elapsed time can’t on its own be a guarantee of one this year. Neutral ENSO conditions are another option. As usual an assertion about warming from greenhouse gases is thrown in, with no evidence to back it up.
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Climate models indicate La Niña is on the way out, with El Niño conditions expected later this year, claims Phys.org.

CSIRO Climate Scientist Dr. Wenju Cai explains what this means for Australia’s weather and how changing conditions will affect the country.

Is La Niña really on the way out? What do the climate models tell us?

We are in the mature season of the current three-consecutive La Niña years. During the three years, heat has been stored in the equatorial Pacific Ocean.

There is no precedent for four-consecutive La Niña years. Models that predict the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycles are indicating a demise of the current La Niña condition.

Does this mean El Niño is on the horizon?

With so much heat charged in the equatorial Pacific, an El Niño is readily triggered by relaxation of the trade winds over the equatorial Pacific. Many models are predicting an El Niño by the northern hemisphere summer months. ENSO predictions are more accurate after June, when noise is low. Several previous three-consecutive-year La Niña events, such as the 1973–1975 or 1983–1985 events, were followed by an El Niño.

What will El Niño mean for Australia?

During El Niño, drought occurs over eastern and north-eastern Australia in spring and summer. During winter and spring, a developing El Niño often drives an Indian Ocean Dipole (cooling in the eastern Indian Ocean), inducing droughts over southern Australia in the rain seasons.

Overall, Australia experiences drought, higher temperatures, bushfires and more intense and frequent heatwaves on land and sea, and these extremes are likely exacerbated by warming from increasing greenhouse gases.

Droughts and heat waves cause damage to Australia’s iconic ecosystems, such as the drying of the Murray and Darling Rivers, and coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef. Drought in the Murray Darling Basin and the drying Murray and Darling Rivers affect agriculture and mining activities, often reducing economic outputs by tens of billions of dollars.

Bushfires kill and displace wild animals, and affect them in the aftermath by causing starvation, lack of shelter and predator attacks. One estimate suggested that the 2019/20 Black Summer Fires affected over three billion wild animals, most of which likely perished.

El Niño and La Niña explained

Both El Niño and La Niña are known as climate phenomena. The oceans switch between these states roughly every two to seven years, depending on the wind and ocean conditions across the equatorial Pacific Ocean between Australia and South America.

El Niño is known as the warm phase and La Niña the cold phase, but it’s also possible to be in a neutral ENSO phase.

Full article here.

Comments
  1. Jamie Spry says:

    Reblogged this on Climatism and commented:
    “What do the climate models tell us?”

    Everything that we want them to… chaos, calamity, extremity!

    /sigh.

  2. tallbloke says:

    Looks fairly neutral to cool at the moment.

    https://psl.noaa.gov/enso/current.html

  3. cementafriend says:

    I get my SOI data from here https://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/soi/ and have been recording daily data since 2015. I do not see three la Nina events only one extended. In these charts you will see an explanation of el nino -la nina events and a record of SOI and IPO https://www.longpaddock.qld.gov.au/rainfall-poster/ Right now we appear to be in a neutral phase of the IPO and we are getting high SOI figures associated with a La Nina. I think the CSIRO chap does not look at proper data and is in the alarmist group.

  4. oldbrew says:

    BoM says: The ENSO Outlook continues at LA NIÑA, but La Niña is weakening.

    http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/enso/outlook/
    (updated every 2 weeks)

    Compare pre- and post- 1997-8 colours…

    (from Tallbloke’s link)

  5. oldbrew says:

  6. roger says:

    “It’s the oceans stupid!” – and it always has been.
    70% oceans and 30% land, how much is a science degree worth these days?

  7. oldbrew says:

    Western Australia in grip of ‘devastating’ flood emergency, PM says
    Story by Reuters
    Updated 6:31 AM EST, Sat January 7, 2023

    The emergency in the country’s far northwest comes after frequent flooding in Australia’s east over the last two years due to a multi-year La Nina weather event, typically associated with increased rainfall. Some regions have endured four major flood crises since last year. [bold added]

    https://edition.cnn.com/2023/01/07/australia/western-australia-devastating-flood-emergency-intl/index.html

  8. Thanks Old Brew. We also had a multiyear La Nina event with floods in 2010-2012 as shown by your chart above. Supposed expert who do not look at past factual data are not experts.

  9. catweazle666 says:

    Real “climate scientists” don’t need no stinkin’ data, cementafriend!

    “The data doesn’t matter. We’re not basing our recommendations on the data. We’re basing them on the climate models.”

    ~ Prof. Chris Folland ~ (Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research)

  10. oldbrew says:

    The BBC wades in…

    What are El Niño and La Niña, and how do they change the weather?
    Published 12 hours ago

    The IPCC concluded there is no clear evidence that climate change has affected El Niño or La Niña events.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-64192508

  11. oldbrew says:

  12. oldbrew says:

    CLIMATE PREDICTION CENTER/NCEP/NWS
    12 January 2023

    Synopsis: A transition from La Niña to ENSO-neutral is anticipated during the February-April 2023 season. By Northern Hemisphere spring (March-May 2023), the chance for ENSO-neutral is 82%.

    https://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/analysis_monitoring/enso_advisory/ensodisc.shtml
    [new version every 4 weeks]