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How will climate change influence El Niño?

24 May, 2010 02:47 PM
UNDER climate change forecasts, the weather of the Pacific region could undergo significant changes as atmospheric temperatures rise, but scientists cannot yet identify the influence it will have on the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) weather phenomenon.

According to the CSIRO, this is a central finding of an international science review by the World Climate Research Program’s Climate Variability and Predictability Pacific Panel, published today in Nature Geoscience.

The panel convened in Australia at the Greenhouse 2009 climate change conference to consider new research that could build an understanding of changes in the behaviour of ENSO.

According to the CSIRO, ENSO is a naturally occurring phenomenon causing climate variability that originates in the tropical Pacific region and influences ecosystems, agriculture, freshwater supplies, hurricanes and other severe weather events worldwide.

"There is an increasing body of evidence pointing to significant changes in Pacific Ocean climate as a consequence of global warming," says co-author, Dr Wenju Cai from CSIRO’s Wealth from Oceans Flagship.

"What we are attempting to clarify is how those changes will enhance or moderate ENSO and, in Australia’s case, deliver stronger or weaker El Niño events which would have vastly different implications."

Dr Cai and Dr Scott Power, a Bureau of Meteorology scientist at the Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research were members of the international team of authors of the Nature Geoscience paper, 'The impact of global warming on the tropical Pacific Ocean and El Nino'.

Dr Power says ENSO will continue to have a profound influence on climate around the world over the coming century.

"This report shows, however, that determining how ENSO will change in response to further global warming and what this means for Australia and our Pacific neighbours is a real challenge," he said.

The report concludes that rising global temperatures will bring change to the Pacific region in several ways: tropical easterly trade winds are expected to weaken; surface ocean temperatures are expected to warm fastest near the equator; and, the thin water layer separating the ocean's upper surface layer from its calm deep water below (the thermocline) is expected to become narrower and less deep.

"During El Niño events, weakening trade winds slosh warm water to the eastern equatorial Pacific and this reduces the east-west ocean temperature difference across the Pacific Ocean," Dr Power says.

"This reduction further weakens the winds to produce a reinforcing feedback loop that makes El Niño grow.

"On the other hand, as the ocean temperature increases along the equator, enhanced cloud cover will curtail the growth of El Niño.

"Global warming causes changes in ocean temperatures, ocean currents, winds and clouds and these changes alter the strength of these feedbacks.

"This could change the character of ENSO and the impact that ENSO has on countries like Australia."

Dr Cai said quantifying changes to the many competing feedbacks underlying ENSO was difficult.

"Clouds in particular are such a difficult feature to represent in models and cloud feedbacks remain the largest uncertainty in the global climate models," Dr Cai said.

"Year-to-year ENSO variability is controlled by this delicate balance of such amplifying and damping feedbacks.

"While the possibility of large changes in ENSO cannot be ruled out, research conducted to date does not yet enable us to say precisely whether ENSO variability will be enhanced or moderated, or how the frequency of events will change."

The paper’s lead author was Dr Matt Collins from the Met Office Hadley Centre in the UK.

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comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Is there anything the CSIRO says that is believable any more! They merely push out propaganda like AGW with no concern for the truth. The world is cooling and yet they fail to help us prepare for it!
Posted by joe, 25/05/2010 7:48:41 AM
Sigh!
Posted by Qlander, 25/05/2010 8:08:17 AM
A clear example of the prostitution of science. CSIRO shame.
Posted by Loc Hey, 25/05/2010 9:04:41 AM
Have the csiro had the "Eureka moment" yet that El Nino is climate change?
Posted by rod, 25/05/2010 9:19:03 AM
I reckon you guys above are much better qualified to project what future weather patterns might be than the CSRIO. Really - it's probably the most credible institution in Australia - can you name a more credible / trusted institution - politicians, the popular media, NGOs, industry groups, armchair critics like you?
Posted by scott, 25/05/2010 9:40:25 AM
The lead author is from the Hadley Centre. Says it all, don't you think?
Posted by Ian Mott, 25/05/2010 9:40:46 AM
Ah, such knowledgeable posters, and not an Intermediate Certificate to share amongst them. They struggle to spell “science”, and the concept is totally foreign to them. Self-interest and ignorance always rule their minds, until the truth buries the mindless morons. Sad.
Posted by Bushie Bill, 25/05/2010 9:46:17 AM
Climategate appears to have improved science communications. Instead of apocalyptic visions of the end being nigh, the report concludes that anything is possible. And to top it off, this is by someone from the UK Met Office Hadley Centre, notorious for alarmism in the past.
Posted by morrgo, 25/05/2010 9:50:19 AM
Top marks to these scientists for trying to understand what is happening in the natural world. And even better that they admit the truth, that they don't yet know what is going on. Research, approached in an honest and sensible way such as this, benefits all of us.
Posted by Ozfirst, 25/05/2010 10:17:52 AM
How about all that "wild" weather across Europe in 1783! Climate change? Based on current populations if that weather occurred today and estimated 20,000 people would have died. It would have been a field day for those hung-up on climate change!
Posted by Gecko, 25/05/2010 10:25:03 AM
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