UN Warns El Niño Likely to Intensify Global Temperatures Amid Record Ocean Warming]
The UN weather agency on Tuesday issued an update predicting an 80% likelihood of an El Niño event between June and August of this year.
El Niño is a periodic warming of sea temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean, which typically lasts between nine and 12 months, according to the WMO. The weather pattern can lead to increased temperatures worldwide, increasing rainfall to some parts of the world and prompting droughts in others, while also spurring hurricane formation in the central and eastern Pacific.
What did the WMO say about the chances and effects of El Niño?
The WMO said that as well as the 80% chance of El Niño between June and August, there was a probability “near or above 90%” of it continuing until at least November if it began. Although some uncertainty remains about El Niño peak strength and timing, most forecast models will suggest it will be at least moderate — and possibly strong — the WMO said.
UN Officials Sound the Alarm
“We need to prepare for a potentially strong El Niño event — which will exacerbates drought and heavy rainfall and increase the risk of heatwaves both on land and in the ocean,” said WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo.
Other associated risks can include higher prevalence of diseases spread by insects like mosquitoes or ticks, as well as reduced food and water supplies. At-risk crops susceptible to climate change like cocoa could also face unusually poor harvests.
Guterres Denounces Fossil Fuel Addiction
Indications of a likely El Niño period have been gathering and noted by the WMO and other groups for several months now, in large part because of high ocean temperatures. The last El Niño period between 2023 and 2024 contributed to 2024 being the hottest year on record worldwide.
“El Niño will pour fuel on the fire of a warming world,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a video statement. “Impacts will hit even harder, travel even further, and cross borders with devastating speed.”
He said that the “only effective response is climate action equal to the crisis,” such as ending the fossil fuel “addiction,” accelerating the shift to renewables, protecting the most vulnerable and delivering early warning systems for all.
Heat Waves Sweep Western Europe and Asia
The warning follows soon after an early summer heat wave bringing record May temperatures to several parts of western Europe. It also coincides with typically high temperatures in parts of Asia like India and China.
In late April to mid-May, the sea-surface temperature in the central-eastern Equatorial Pacific — the area used as a monitoring reference — was approaching El Niño thresholds, the WMO said, with sub-surface temperatures more than 6 degrees Celsius (roughly 10.8 Fahrenheit) above average.
The WMO said that for June to August, forecasts project “a nearly universal dominance of above normal temperatures in nearly all parts of the globe”.
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