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The new year begins with a major El Nino event in place and a warming atmosphere.
The world has entered 2016 with a major El Nino event in place.
This one has changed the weather globally in a year that already looks like the warmest yet recorded.
El Nino is the gathering of warm water in the central, then eastern equatorial Pacific, with its gradual banking up against the coast of the Americas.
It is an irregular event but one with dramatic consequences to the weather for most countries on earth.
This is because it has the effect of moving the areas of major evaporation, therefore cyclone formation, eastwards by about 60 degrees.
That means all the seasonal dry areas follow suit, and we end up with unusually heavy rains for some, heatwaves for others. Droughts and storms occur more often than normal.
This El Nino event stands at the moment as the third strongest, following 1997 and 1982, since reliable records started being kept in 1950.
Typically there are about three events per decade, but most are not major in their influence.
As 2016 starts, there are significant floods in South America, the United States and the United Kingdom.
Skiers are despairing at the lack of snow in the European Alps and enjoying the first sight of it in the New England resorts of the US. Meanwhile, drought prevails in Southern Africa and Amazonia.
In many places then, January 1 2016 was greeted in unusual conditions:
This year has a head start at being another in the continuing series of “warmest year recorded”.
The El Nino event has probably just peaked but will likely last through the first quarter of the year. Expect more unusual weather, but maybe with a return to the seasonal norm by the end of the year.