El Niño forecast to drive record heat from the
Amazon to Alaska in 2024
Coastal areas facing ‘enormous and urgent climate
crisis’ as event supercharges human-caused global heating, scientists say
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Thu 29 Feb
2024 16.00 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/feb/29/el-nino-forecast-record-heat-2024-climate-crisis
The current
climate event known as El Niño is likely to supercharge global heating and
deliver record-breaking temperatures from the Amazon to Alaska in 2024,
analysis has found.
Coastal
areas of India by the Bay of Bengal and by the South China Sea, as well as the
Philippines and the Caribbean, are also likely to experience unprecedented heat
in the period to June, the scientists said, after which El Niño may weaken.
The natural
phenomenon, in which heat is released from the western Pacific Ocean, is known
to increase global surface temperatures and helped 2023 smash the record for
the hottest year by a large margin. Extreme heat in the second half of 2023 as
El Niño kicked in had severe impacts on people living in North America, Europe
and China, South America and Madagascar as the climate crisis intensified.
The new
analysis uses computer models to identify the likely regional hotspots in the
first half of 2024. It also found there was a 90% chance that the global
temperature over this period would set a new record.
“Intense
heatwaves and tropical cyclones, combined with [human-caused] global sea level
rise, [mean] densely populated coastal areas are facing an enormous and urgent
climate crisis that challenges our current capacity for adaptation, mitigation
and risk management,” said Dr Ning Jiang, at the Chinese Academy of
Meteorological Sciences in Beijing, and his co-authors.
“This
impending warmth heightens the risk of year-round marine heatwaves and
escalates the threat of wildfires and other negative consequences in Alaska and
the Amazon basin,” he said. Seas and coastal areas are particularly vulnerable
because the ocean can hold more heat than land, meaning hot conditions can
persist there for longer periods of time.
The Earth’s
climate cycles naturally between El Niño and its cooler counterpart, La Niña.
This boosts and moderates the strong underlying trend of global heating, which
is caused by the rising levels of carbon dioxide from fossil fuels in the
atmosphere.
El Niño
usually peaks between November and January and so the new study, published in
the journal Scientific Reports, modelled the effects of the event on the
regional variation in surface air temperatures from July 2023 to June 2024.
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