World

El Nino weather phenomenon has developed: US Climate Prediction Centre

This increases likelihood of more intense Gulf, Atlantic coast hurricane season

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 09 Jun 2023 11:00AM

El Nino weather phenomenon has developed: US Climate Prediction Centre
The US National Weather Service confirms the occurrence of an ocean climate phenomenon and the presence of El Nino conditions, which are expected to gradually intensify throughout the winter in the Northern Hemisphere. – Pixabay pic, June 9, 2023

WASHINGTON – The United States National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Centre says an El Nino weather pattern has officially developed, raising the possibility of a more robust hurricane season for Gulf and Atlantic coast regions.

In May, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) predicted a high likelihood of an El Nino weather phenomenon developing in 2023. The National Weather Service now confirms that an ocean climate phenomenon has indeed occurred, United Press International (UPI) reported.

“El Nino conditions are present and are expected to gradually strengthen into the Northern Hemisphere winter 2023-2024,” the Climate Prediction Centre said in an update yesterday.

“In May, weak El Nino conditions emerged as above-average sea surface temperatures strengthened across the equatorial Pacific Ocean. All of the latest weekly Nino indices were more than +0.5 degrees Celsius,” officials at the centre said.

The centre predicted the climate pattern would continue through this winter and could even strengthen in the fall.

“At its peak, the chance of a strong El Nino is nearly the same as it was last month (56% chance of a November-January Nino),” UPI quoted the centre as saying.

An El Nino phenomenon happens when the surface of the Pacific Ocean warms, causing significant weather changes. A La Nina weather phenomenon occurs when the Pacific cools. Together, the phenomena form the El Nino/Southern Oscillation cycle, and it can predict the severity of hurricanes at different times in the cycle and in different oceans.

In March, the WMO declared the three-year La Nina phenomenon over.

In May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted a near-normal hurricane season this year, with 12 to 17 named storms forecast, it added. – Bernama, June 9, 2023

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