Author Topic: El Nino this year will probably be weak  (Read 3222 times)

Offline Mark

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El Nino this year will probably be weak
« on: June 05, 2014, 06:12:51 AM »
El Nino this year will probably be weak, potentially reducing the impact of the event which typically brings drought to parts of Asia and rains to South America, said Commodity Weather Group LLC and AccuWeather Inc.

The chance of a weak pattern is 65 percent and the odds of a moderate one are 35 percent, said David Streit, CWG’s co-founder. The probability of a weak event is 80 percent, said Dale Mohler, a forecaster at AccuWeather. Streit and Mohler have been meteorologists for three decades.

El Ninos can roil world agricultural markets as farmers contend with dry weather or too much rain. Forecasters from the U.S. to the United Nations have warned that the event could happen this year, and Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said last month the pattern may develop by August. ABN Amro Group NV says confirmation would bolster coffee, sugar and cocoa futures.

“It’s still a tough call on whether this will remain weak or reach moderate” levels, Streit from Bethesda, Maryland-based CWG said in an e-mail to Bloomberg. A weak event is more likely because of the weakening of the warm pool of water below the surface of the Pacific Ocean and “the difficulty in getting the trade winds to weaken significantly,” he said.

El Ninos, caused by the periodic warming of the tropical Pacific, occur irregularly every two to seven years and are associated with warmer-than-average years. The last El Nino was from 2009 to 2010, and since then the Pacific has either been in its cooler state, called La Nina, or neutral.

Weak Intensity

While the Standard & Poor’s GSCI index of eight agricultural commodities climbed 10 percent this year, it’s declined 8.6 percent from an 11-month high at the start of May on signs of increasing world grain supplies.

El Nino will probably “set in during July and last six to eight months,” said Mohler from AccuWeather. “It should be of weak to perhaps moderate intensity.”

In 1997-1998, the strongest El Nino on record back to 1950 helped push the global mean temperature in 1998 up 1.2 degrees to what was then an all-time high of 58.1 degrees Fahrenheit (15 Celsius), according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The event in 2006-2007 caused droughts in the Asia-Pacific region, more than halving Australia’s wheat output and hurting Indonesia’s coffee harvest.

The probability of an El Nino is around 85 percent and the event should develop by late June, said Donald Keeney, a meteorologist at MDA Weather Services in Gaithersburg, Maryland. The chance of a weak pattern is 35 percent, for a moderate one 50 percent and a strong one 15 percent, he said.

There are signs an El Nino is imminent, presaging changes to global weather patterns, the UN’s World Meteorological Organization said April 15. The U.S. Climate Prediction Center said May 8 that the chances of El Nino developing during the Northern Hemisphere summer exceed 65 percent.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Diep Ngoc Pham in Hanoi at dpham5@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net Ovais Subhani
El Nino Seen as Probably Weak by Forecasters Damping Impact - Bloomberg



Offline Mark

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El Nino drying weather pattern has disappeared, scientists say
« Reply #1 on: June 05, 2014, 05:40:37 PM »

THE feared El Nino weather pattern has vanished. 
 
Scientists say the conditions which raised the likelihood of an El Nino forming over Australia this year have gone.

Department of Environment and Primary Industries agronomist Dale Grey is speaking now in a statewide hook-up advising farmers and farm specialists the El Nino may still rear its ugly head in spring, but for now, had gone.

Only a week ago, Australian weather experts had said while conditions for an El Nino had eased, there was still a 70 per cent chance of one forming.

Mr Grey said he had been told by farmers celebrating a wet autumn “if this is an El Nino then we’ll take it”.

He said all the usual signals for an El Nino, sea temperatures, trade winds, cloud at the equator — had all changed.

Mr Gregy said many of the internal weather models had now “changed their mind”.
El Nino drying weather pattern has disappeared, scientists say | Weekly Times Now


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