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by Mike Halpert Washington DC (SPX) Jun 16, 2014
By this point, most of you have heard that it looks like El Nino is coming, and maybe you're wondering why you should care. After all, why should it matter if the tropical Pacific Ocean becomes warmer than average? That's thousands of miles away from the continental United States. Well, it turns out that El Nino often results in changes in the patterns of precipitation and temperature across many parts of the globe, including North America (Ropelewski and Halpert 1987, Halpert and Ropelewski 1992). Many folks probably remember the heavy rainfall, flooding, and landslides that occurred in California in 1982/83 and again in 1997/98. As the region suffers through a devastating drought, it could be something of a relief if we knew for certain that El Nino would bring similar soaking rains. But those two events were the 2 strongest El Ninos in the past 60 years, and we've seen many other El Nino years where California didn't experience those types of devastating impacts. So assuming El Nino develops, what can we expect across the United States and when can we expect it? By examining seasonal climate conditions in previous El Nino years, scientists have identified a set of typical impacts associated with the phenomenon (Figure 1). "Associated with" doesn't mean that all of these impacts happen during every El Nino episode. However, they happen more often during El Nino than you'd expect by chance, and many of them have occurred during many El Nino events. In general, El Nino-related temperature and precipitation impacts across the United States occur during the cold half of the year (October through March). The most reliable of these signals (the one that has been observed most frequently) is wetter-than-average conditions along the Gulf Coast from Texas to Florida during this 6-month period. This relationship has occurred during more than 80% of the El Nino events in the past 100 years.
In Southern California and U.S. Southwest, strength matters For instance, during the two strongest events in the past 60 years (1982/83 and 1997/98), much-above-median rainfall amounts fell across the entire state of California. Median or above-median precipitation was recorded over the entire state during strong episodes in both 1957/58 and 1972/73. However, strong events in 1991/92 and 2009/10 only provided small surpluses in the southern part of the state, while precipitation during 1965/66 was generally average to below-average across the state. For weak and moderate strength episodes, the relationship is even weaker, with approximately one-third of the events featuring above-average precipitation, one-third near-average precipitation, and one-third below-average precipitation. Elsewhere over the United States, El Nino impacts are associated with drier conditions in the Ohio Valley, and there is a less-reliable dry signal in the Pacific Northwest and the northern Rockies. Hawaii also often experiences lower-than-average rainfall totals from the late fall through early spring period. The climate impacts linked to El Nino help forecasters make skillful seasonal outlooks. While not guaranteed, the changes in temperature and precipitation across the United States are fairly reliable and often provide enough lead time for emergency managers, businesses, government officials, and the public to properly prepare and make smart decisions to save lives and protect livelihoods.
Definitions Moderate El Nino: Episode when the peak Oceanic Nino Index (ONI) is greater than or equal to 1.0 C and less than or equal to 1.4 C. Strong El Nino: Episode when the peak Oceanic Nino Index (ONI) is greater than or equal to 1.5 C.
Related Links NOAA climate.gov Water News - Science, Technology and Politics
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