Wonder what Hilary has been up to?
SURF:
Doesn't matter who you voted for this past November, you have to applaud that she was a category 2 hurricane this week. But before we delve into politics, let's reflect on the week that was.
FORECAST:
Hilary/Irwin and southern hemi swell peak on Monday with head high sets in north county and well overhead as you move towards the OC.
WEATHER:
Got a combo weather pattern today- low clouds may stick around at the coast while tropical clouds float high above. Weak high pressure moves in tomorrow for a little more sunshine by Sunday and then a surge of tropical clouds moves in again Monday. Beach temps will hang around the mid-70's for most of the next 7 days. Models then show a greater surge of tropical moisture by Tuesday and we may actually get a stray shower at the coast. If that happens- and the surf is good- beware of lightening strikes! Tropical moisture may hang around most of next week but the chance of lightening should be over by Thursday.
BEST BET:
Lots of S swell from Hilary, Irwin, and southern hemi swell Sunday through Wednesday. Add in some warm water and tropical clouds and you have an excuse to blow off work!
NEWS OF THE WEEK:
Last week I talked about the slight chance El Nino could return this fall/winter. But what about the long term prospects for El Nino? As the earth’s temperature continues to rise ever so slightly (due to man-made greenhouse gas emissions OR natural variations through time- pick your poison), new research suggests that extreme El Niño events — which can cause intense rainfall, flooding and other severe weather events in certain parts of the world — will occur more and more often as long as the temperature keep rising. And even if global climate were to stabilize at a 2.7 degree threshold, studies conclude, these events will continue to increase in frequency for up to another 100 years afterward. I’ll let the the findings from the journal of Nature Climate Change explain:
“It was really a surprise that what we find is after we reach 2.7 degrees and stabilize world temperatures, the frequency of extreme El Niño continued to increase for another century,” said Wenju Cai, a chief research scientist at Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization and one of the study’s lead authors. “We were expecting that the risk would stabilize.”
The study builds on a 2014 paper, also published in Nature Climate Change by Cai and a group of colleagues, which first suggested that extreme El Niño events will increase with global warming. That paper focused on a business-as-usual climate trajectory, in which greenhouse gas emissions remain at high levels into the future, Cai noted. It found that under this scenario, the frequency of extreme El Niño events would double from their preindustrial levels within this century.
The 2014 paper produced mixed responses among scientists at the time. Some experts, including Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research, suggested the models they used may not accurately simulate the behavior of El Niño.
Nevertheless, after the Paris climate agreement was finalized, and the 2.7 degree temperature goal was established, the researchers were interested in revisiting their previous work. This time, they specifically investigated the way El Niño would be affected if the world actually managed to stay within this climate threshold, a target that many scientists believe is already close to slipping through our fingers. Recent research has suggested that we’re on track to overshoot this climate goal within the next few decades.
During a typical El Niño event, Cai said, parts of the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean become warmer than usual, causing changes in wind patterns and rainfall in certain places around the world. Often, the consequences include warming over the western Americas and increased rainfall in the tropical Pacific. During an “extreme” El Niño event, these warming patterns tend to be shifted even further toward the east and the equator, forming a zone near the coast of Ecuador where intense amounts of heat transfer between the ocean and the atmosphere. The results tend to include even more intense rainfall in the region than usual, sometimes up to 10 times the typical amount, Cai said.
The researchers used a collection of 13 climate models to simulate a scenario in which global carbon dioxide emissions peak around the year 2040 and then decline, a trajectory that would keep the world within the 2.7 degree threshold. They then took note of how frequently these extreme events occurred in the simulations.
The models suggested that by the time we hit the 2.7 degree mark, the frequency of extreme El Niño will have doubled from its preindustrial level of about five events every 100 years to about 10. This increase will occur steadily over time, the researchers note, meaning that any additional increase in carbon dioxide in the future will lead to an increased risk of an extreme event.
This effect does increase slightly under stronger climate scenarios — the researchers report that under a 3.6 degree climate threshold, the increase in frequency is a bit stronger. But overall, each scenario produces approximately double the preindustrial frequency during this century, even if the effect is a bit larger under more severe trajectories. This is in keeping with the 2014 research, which suggests that under a business-as-usual climate scenario, the frequency of extreme El Niño events will also approximately double before the end of the century.
But the consequences won’t stop when we reach 2.7 degrees. The study suggests that the frequency of extreme El Niño events will continue to increase (although at a slower rate) even after global temperatures stabilize, potentially for up to another 100 years. These findings are less firm, since not all the models are capable of projecting beyond the end of the century. But several of them indicate that by the year 2150, the frequency will have grown to about 14 events per 100 years.
The researchers noted that the same results did not hold true for La Niña events, which often produce the opposite effects of El Niño. While previous research has suggested that more intense warming scenarios may lead to more frequent La Niña events as well, the milder climate trajectory in this study did not produce any significant changes.
Trenberth, who was not involved with the research, still has concerns about the models used in the research, which he says are “the same flawed models used before.” He argues that the models do a poor job of capturing some of the impacts of El Niño events — even “regular” ones — and the way they’re influenced by temperature and moisture in the atmosphere.
But Cai says he believes the study’s results are “believable” and that there are mechanisms to explain them. Because of the influence of climate change, the eastern equatorial Pacific is warming quickly, he said. As a result, it’s becoming easier for the critical centers of convection, or heat exchange, which affect global weather patterns, to move from west to east across the Pacific as they do during El Niño events.
The timing of El Niño events in the future will depend on factors including natural climate variations and weather patterns. Scientists are still working on figuring out better ways to predict El Niño before it hits, but for the time being, it’s often difficult to see it coming too far in advance. But over the course of a century, the study suggests we’ll see more of them as the climate continues to warm — and even after it stabilizes — even if we don’t know exactly when they’ll be coming.
In conclusion, if you like flooding, downed powerlines, and 100’ surf at Cortes Bank, then expect to see a lot more of that through this century.
PIC OF THE WEEK:
Travel half way around the world, hike a mile from your parked car to the cliff, scale down the slippery path, and paddle out through the boulders. Worth it? Darn tootin' it is.
Keep Surfing,
Michael W. Glenn
Leader of the Free World
Filling In For Biebs
Slater Said I'm His Favorite Surfer