Stephanie Nebehay PlanetArk 7 Jul 10;
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La Nina is likely to cool the tropical Pacific in coming months, a phenomenon which usually causes stronger monsoons across Asia and eastern Australia, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Tuesday.
The weather condition also promotes the development of storms including hurricanes in the tropical Atlantic, it said.
El Nino, the opposite phenomenon which warms the sea, rapidly dissipated in early May after prevailing since late 2009. This has led to the current situation, bordering on a weak La Nina event in the tropical Pacific, according to the United Nations agency.
"These borderline conditions are more likely than not to strengthen to become a basin-wide La Nina episode during the second half of 2010," WMO said in a statement.
"While it is likely that the La Nina conditions will further develop over the next several months, the timing and magnitude of such an event in 2010 are still uncertain," WMO expert Rupa Kumar Kolli told a news briefing in Geneva.
Current conditions are not adequate for the WMO to declare that a La Nina event is actually in place, he said.
Most forecasting models do not a indicate a particularly strong La Nina event in terms of sea-surface temperatures, he said.
Typical La Nina events are usually associated with stronger monsoons in most parts of Asia and also Australia. A La Nina event is also associated with an active hurricane season in the tropical Atlantic, Kolli said.
"So these are some of the risk factors that should be kept in mind," he said.
The U.S. government's top weather agency has already predicted that the Atlantic storm season which began on June 1 may be the most intense since 2005 when Hurricane Katrina killed over 1,000 people and disrupted oil production by crashing through Gulf of Mexico energy facilities.
Kolli, asked about the possible effects of La Nina on efforts to clean up BP's Gulf of Mexico oil slick, said: "La Nina by itself is unlikely to play a role in that region."
"But considering that there is a possibility of an active hurricane season, the hurricanes definitely have the potential to churn up the sea and also play a role in the spread of the oil spill in some ways. But this all depends upon the track of the hurricane and the strength of the hurricane and many other factors associated with individual hurricane events," he said.
If a La Nina event becomes well-established, it is also associated with a slight decrease in air temperature in many parts of the world, according to Kolli.
"That has implications for the global mean temperature," he told Reuters.
(Editing by Jonathan Lynn)
La Nina likely to develop in coming months: UN weather body
Yahoo News 6 Jul 10;
GENEVA (AFP) – The UN weather agency said Tuesday that El Nino, which wreaks havoc around the Pacific and east Africa, has dissipated, but La Nina -- another disruptive weather phenomenon, is likely to develop.
"Following the rapid dissipation of El Nino in early May 2010, cool-neutral to weak La Nina conditions have developed in the tropical Pacific," said the World Meteorological Organisation in a statement.
"These conditions are more likely than not to strengthen into a basin-wide La Nina over the coming months."
The WMO said however, that "the timing and magnitude of such an event in 2010 are as yet uncertain."
La Nina is the opposition condition of El Nino. It is characterised by unusually cool ocean temperatures in the eastern equatorial Pacific.
In late 2008, it was blamed for icy conditions that claimed dozens of lives across Europe.
The weather phenomenon can also bring about strong rainfall in Indonesia, Malaysia and Australia, as well as drought in South America.
El Nino, meanwhile, is characterised by unusually warm ocean temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific.
La Nina Expected In Pacific This Year: WMO
posted by Ria Tan at 7/07/2010 07:00:00 AM
labels extreme-nature, global