Skip navigation

El Nino expected to strengthen through fall

Now considered weak, it could become moderate or strong, experts say

Video: Weather
Image: First winter storm of the season moves across the upper USA
EPA
Cold hits Midwest, snow slams Northeast
Dec. 10: Temperatures in many parts of the Midwest have plummeted well below zero, and forecasters are expecting as much as three feet of snow in the Northeast. NBC’s John Yang reports from Wisconsin and the Weather Channel’s Julie Martin reports from upstate New York.

Slideshow
  Hurricane havoc
View images from the deadliest and costliest hurricanes to hit the United States.
updated 1:38 p.m. ET Sept. 10, 2009

WASHINGTON - A weak El Niño is under way and is expected to strengthen and last into the early months of next year, U.S. government climate researchers said Thursday.

The periodic climate phenomenon is marked by warming of the central Pacific Ocean and changes in wind direction and air pressure that can affect weather around the world.

The presence of an El Niño can help to suppress Atlantic hurricane activity by increasing the vertical wind shear over the Caribbean Sea and tropical Atlantic Ocean. Wind shear, a sudden change in wind direction, tends to interrupt the rising air that helps fuel the storms.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

National Weather Service forecasters said Pacific sea surface temperatures are running between 1.3 degree Fahrenheit and 1.8 degree Fahrenheit above normal.

Computer models indicate this could strengthen during coming months, the researchers at the Climate Prediction Center, a division of the weather service, said in a report.

"A majority of the model forecasts ... suggest El Niño will reach at least moderate strength during the Northern Hemisphere fall," they wrote. "Many model forecasts even suggest a strong El Niño during the fall and winter, but current observations and trends indicate that El Niño will most likely peak at moderate strength."

"Expected El Niño impacts during September-November 2009 include enhanced precipitation over the west-central tropical Pacific Ocean and the continuation of drier-than-average conditions over Indonesia," the experts added. "Temperature and precipitation impacts over the United States are typically weak during the Northern Hemisphere summer and early fall, generally strengthening during the late fall and winter."

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  MORE FROM WEATHER  
  
Weather Section Front
 
Add Weather headlines to your news reader:
 

Sponsored links

Resource guide