El nino how does it affect us
This makes constant monitoring and awareness extremely important for decision makers across multiple sectors. These consist of:. This does not mean that cold weather will not happen this winter but typical extreme cold weather may be milder and less frequent. In addition, this pattern may bring drier conditions to eastern portions of the Midwest. Warmer conditions may reduce total snowfall and the frequency of heavy snowfall events in the Midwest.
However, a potentially more active storm track across the southern U. This situation produces increases in thermoelectric generation based on fossil fuels, which in turn pressures the prices of electricity, leading to an insufficiency in the logistic capacity to import and store enough fuel to address the people's electric and mobility needs.
These rains represent a risk for the physical vulnerability of the infrastructure such as housing and highways by the river's banks. In addition, the degree of saturation of the ground maximum capacity of the ground to absorb water may lead to landslides, mud avalanches, electric discharges, wind bursts, floods in machine rooms, loss of transmission towers, distribution posts, and impact on substations, clogging of dams, and the need to alleviate the maximum avenues that could generate impacts on the near-by populations and the electric energy generation infrastructure.
In general, it may be stated that the risks for countries affected by floods during the development of the event, is the destruction of the existing infrastructure, which represents a loss of investments. This reality creates great concern when taking into account that the ENOS is a recurring event. We only had 2 cold spells this winter and they never lasted more than 4 days each.
There were a number of days where it was warmer in the water surfing, than standing on the cliff watching the surf. Revised forecasts indicate a weak to moderate El Nino towards the end of the summer and into next spring. Hurricane forecasts have been upgraded in some instances to account for the expected decrease in intensity of the upcoming El Nino.
I appreciate your first hand take on this. Very warm water off the west coast is not always associated with a moderate or strong El Nino. It is usually associated with a strong positive phase Pacific Decadal Oscillation. It is only weakening now.
I live in north central Texas, close to the OK border. In 82 we received 23 inches of rain in 2 weeks. Our average is 46" per year. I grew up in the 50s and 60s when the temperatures were very hot and little rain.
If one snow flake fell from the sky, school was called off. Nowadays, we might miss 2 to 5 snow days I do not know how our cattle survived but they did. No one had to mow their yards after April Interestingly, we visited Australia in July of The Outback was green because they had received more rain than usual. Bottom line is that El Nino can be good for us but bad for the Outback.
Summer Permalink. I see that Alaska barely shows effect, but warm. How is this really going to effect us? Our winter was mild last year, our summer is starting off slow. Does this mean we should have a hard winter also? On one hand, we need the rain, on the other, we don't need the mudslides and washouts.
Typically we get much more rain than the surrounding areas. Unfortunately, no matter how much rain you get to start with, the soil is so rock hard it will mostly run off and not soak in to the ground in the beginning.
Lots of mudslides at that point. Hopefully the ground will moisten up and be able to absorb the water quickly and the danger will mostly pass. That has been true no matter what state I have lived in. These cold waters in the Pacific push the jet stream northward. This tends to lead to drought in the southern U. The North and Canada tend to be wetter and colder. This environment supports more marine life and attracts more cold-water species, like squid and salmon, to places like the California coast.
ENSO Impacts.
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