How El Niño Will Change The World's Weather In 2014
With a 90% chance of the global weather phenomenon striking this year, impacts both devastating and beneficial will be felt from India to Peru
The global El Niño weather phenomenon, whose impacts cause global famines, floods – and even wars – now has a 90% chance of striking this year, according to the latest forecast released to the Guardian.
El Niño begins as a giant pool of warm water swelling in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean, that sets off a chain reaction of weather events around the world – some devastating and some beneficial.
India is expected to be the first to suffer, with weaker monsoon rains undermining the nation’s fragile food supply, followed by further scorching droughts in Australia and collapsing fisheries off South America. But some regions could benefit, in particular the US, where El Niño is seen as the “great wet hope” whose rains could break the searing drought in the west...
- Tags:
- Andrew Watkins
- atmospheric science
- Australian Bureau of Meteorology
- Australian National Farmers' Federation (NFF)
- Australian National University (ANU) Climate Change Institute
- Australian weather
- Axel Timmermann
- Bill Patzert
- Brent Finlay
- California drought
- climate prediction
- climate science
- drought
- Economist Intelligence Unit
- Ecuador's International El Niño Centre
- El Niño
- European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF)
- global weather
- Indian Associated Chambers of Commerce (Assocham)
- Indian weather
- Jerry Brown
- Kerry Emanuel
- Krishna Kumar
- Leo Abruzzese
- Luis Icochea
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
- meteorology
- Michael Raupach
- monsoon
- NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- National Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA)
- National Agrarian University - La Molina (UNALM)
- Nick Klingaman
- oceanography
- Pacific Ocean
- Rodney Martinez
- Solomon Hsiang
- South America
- Tim Stockdale
- United States (US) weather
- University of Hawaii (UH)
- University of Reading (UOR)
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