Ocean temperatures around Australia last month were 0.5C above average, as the UN’s weather agency declared the world was now in an El Niño.
El Niño events influence weather extremes around the globe and for Australia increase the risk of drought, heatwaves, bushfires and coral bleaching.
The World Meteorological Organization declared the El Niño late on Tuesday, following on from the US government’s weather agency’s declaration last month.
The next El Niño: when is it coming and how strong might this one be for Australia?Read more
The El Niño is associated with higher than average sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific that pump extra heat into the atmosphere.
Together with global heating, climate scientists say the El Niño event could push global average temperatures to all-time record highs this year or – more likely – next year.
Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology stopped short of declaring an El Niño on Tuesday. Despite sea surface temperatures in the central Pacific already surpassing the El Niño threshold, the bureau said changes in winds, clouds and atmospheric pressure also associated with El Niño “have not yet been observed”.
“This means the Pacific Ocean and atmosphere have yet to become fully coupled, as occurs during El Niño events,” it said. “El Niño typically suppresses winter-spring rainfall in eastern Australia.”
The bureau’s El Niño update included a claim that last month was the hottest for ocean surface temperatures in the Australia region for any June since records began.
On Wednesday it said it had made a mistake and that claim was incorrect. Temperatures were only 0.5C above average and well below the 1C record for June set in 2022.
The bureau has slightly different parameters for an official declaration of an El Niño than its US counterpart, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, including a higher threshold for sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific.
But international climate models surveyed by the bureau – including its own – all show that ocean temperatures in the tropical Pacific will stay above El Niño thresholds “at least into the beginning of the southern hemisphere summer”, the bureau said.
What is an El Niño? And how will it affect Australia? – video
The bureau climatologist Zhi-Weng Chua said different weather agencies had different parameters for declaring El Niño. While the sea surface temperatures were above the threshold, the bureau had not seen a change in the trade winds that blow from east to west across the equatorial Pacific.
“In an El Niño we would expect to see those trade winds weaken or reverse but we have not seen that yet,” he said.
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2023-07-04 20:52:03
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