El Nio is on our doorstep, but not all are created equal. So what does it mean for Canada? - Action News
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ScienceAnalysis

El Nio is on our doorstep, but not all are created equal. So what does it mean for Canada?

A warming in a region of the Pacific Ocean is signalling a potential El Nio, which affects weather around the globe. But there isn't just one type of El Nio, so what can we expect?

Typically,El Nioaffects Canada in the winter and spring, bringing milder temperatures

The central and Pacific Ocean is seen on a globe with a notable red region near the equator stretching from Peru westward, indicating warmer than average sea surface temperatures.
Satellite sea surface temperature departure in the Pacific Ocean for the month of October 2015, where darker orange-red colours are above normal temperatures and are indicative of El Nio. (NOAA)

A global weather phenomenon is coming.

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is forecastingan El Nio within the next few months, with a 90 per cent chance that it will carry on into the northern hemisphere winter.

El Nio is acyclical warming in the Pacific Ocean that, coupled with the atmosphere, can cause a rise in the global temperature. It can also affect weather patterns around the world.

"It's not 100 per cent. Nothing's 100 per cent," said Jon Gottschalck, chief of NOAA's Climate Prediction Center's climate operational prediction branch. "But right now, most of the observations and model forecasts are really painting that sort of picture that we'll go into an El Nio event as we enter the summer months or mid-summer period."

As well, the forecastEl Niocould be mild, or it could bestrong, such as the ones in 19971998 and 20152016, both of which recorded some of the highest global temperatures ever recorded.

While forecasting has certainly become better over the past few decades, the question always remains as to what some of the potential consequences could be for countries already dealing with a warming world, especially Canada, which has warmed at twice the global rate.

The problem is, not all El Nios are created equal.There are several different types, including a coastal El Nio, which occurs off the coast of Peru, or the dateline/Modoki El Nio, where the warming is found mainly in the central equatorial Pacific Ocean. And each of those bring different consequences to different regions of the world.

As the planet continues to warm due to increased CO2 in our atmosphere, the potential El Nio has climatologists and meteorologists on their heels, particularly as we have come out of a "triple-dip" La Nia. The three years of what is essentially the opposite of El Nio where the region in the Pacific Ocean cools still saw some of the warmest global temperatures on record.

And a potentially powerful or "super" El Nio could raise global temperatures further above the current 1.2 C of warming compared to pre-industrial times.

The whole El Nio/La Nia system referred to as the El Nio-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) has itself been changing. La Nias have been warming, as have the El Nios and the in-between period of neutral observations.

WATCH |El Nio and La Nia explained:

"What's interesting about this, and I think it's so important to remember, is all of these events are getting warmer," said Simon Donner, climate scientist and professor at the University of British Columbia. "If we do end up with a strong El Nio event, if that same event happened in the 1800s, it simply wouldn't be as warm and the impacts wouldn't be as strong."

Just look at2021, whenduring the "cool" La Nia,Western Canada saw devastating heat waves that contributed to the deaths of roughly 600 people. An all-time Canadian record-high temperature of 49.6 C was recorded in Lytton, B.C., which was practically wiped off the map during a particularly catastrophic wildfire season.

Trying to determine the potential fallout in terms of extreme weather events in the ENSO cycle is especially difficultin the time of global warming.

Different types of ElNios

El Nio first came into the public consciousness in 1983,as it was the first major one in recent history that brought with it severe flooding and drought to various parts of the world.But it wasn't until 19971998 that the El Nio truly burst on the scene.

That season, heavy rains drenched parts of California, resulting in major agricultural damage that totalled roughly $1 billion USand killed19 people. Globally,more than 23,000 people died.Images of landslides and floods were splashed across television screens. There were even bumper stickers that read, "Don't blame me! Blame El Nio!"

A large house slides down a muddy hill.
A luxury home in the Orange County suburb of Laguna Niguel slips down a hillside eroded by heavy El Nino-generated rains, on March 19, 1998. (Vince Bucci/AFP/Getty Images)

Because it was what climatologists refer to as a "super El Nio," and because it was one of the first ones that was forecast accurately, todayEl Niois in our collective consciousness even if we don't completely understand the complicated cycle.

We've had several other El Nios that haven't been as strong, butthose don't pique the interest of the public nearly as much as those that are "super," defined as whenthe Pacific warming has been 1 C to almost 3 C warmer than average (the NOAA criteria for an El Nio is three months of 0.5 C-above average surface sea temperatures in a specific region of the Pacific Ocean, but not all weather agencies use this criteria).

A gif shows the Pacific Ocean mostly in whites and blues, with a strong red area emerging from the Pacific east moving westward.
Water expands as it warms, causing the surface of the ocean to rise. This image shows the height of the Pacific Ocean rising as the warm waters of El Nino developed in 2015. (NASA Earth Observatory map by Joshua Stevens/Akiko Kayashi and Bill Patzert/NASA/JPL Ocean Surface Topography Team)

And this can be problematic, said Donner.

"What I worry about with this is that, when we group all El Nio events together, we end up misleading people about what to expect in their part of the world," he said. "It's like moving where stones are in a stream: you move the stones, the water flow around those stones is going to change."

What can we expect in Canada?

Typically,El Nioaffects Canada in the winter and spring, bringing milder temperatures, particularly in the northwest, west and Central Canada. While it doesn't usually affect Eastern Canada, it can reduce the numberof hurricanes.

On Thursday, NOAA released their hurricane outlook and forecast a 40 per cent chance that the Atlantic hurricane season will be near-normal, good news for Atlantic Canada. El Nioaccounts for 33 per cent to 38 per cent of the variance in the Atlantic basin, they said in a press conference.Other factors, such as African monsoons, could affect that forecast, however.

During an El Nio, the annual temperature in Canada alsotends to be milder.

"There havebeen some events where North America has been abovenormal during some of the strong El Nio events," said NOAA's Gottschalck. "So one other reason that people I think harness into El Nio is that typically, there's less snowfall, and a lot of people like snow, or they're interested in that."

In 20152016, which brought the next superEl Nio, meteorological winter (December, January and February) was 1 C to 5 C warmer than normal in all provinces and territories, most notably in the Yukon, the central Prairies and Quebec.

Globally, 2016 was the warmest on record.

"Ifyou really look at the data, for the past few decades, you see thatin the really strong El Nio events like super ElNioevents the warmth and sort of dryness pretty much stretches all the way over to Ontario," Donner said.

"Western and central Canadastretching all the way over into Ontario would generally experience a dry winter, and an unusually mild winterthat usually stretches stretches into the spring."

It's important to note that the world is warming with or without El Nio's help. Of the top 10 global hottest years on record, nine have all occurred since 2014. And within that period, the ENSO cycle has been either mainly neutral or with LaNias.

The biggest challenge for forecasting in Canada is about what type of El Nio event this is going to be, Donner said.

"Because right now, all of the big meteorological agencies in the world and all the models are saying we're aiming towardEl Nio conditions, but they're using a prediction system that mixes different types of El Nio together," he said.

"And if we end up with a classic, powerful El Nio event like 20152016,you could say it's fairly certain we're going to have a dry and mild winter here in Canada. If we end up with one of these sorts of central Pacific El Nio events, or what the Japanese call an El Nio Modoki, the effects in Canadian weather are less certain."