La Nina to Persist into 2008 - UN Weather Agency
SWITZERLAND: November 1, 2007
GENEVA - A "La Nina" cooling of sea temperatures is under way in the Pacific
Ocean and the phenomenon is likely to persist into next year, the United
Nations weather agency said on Wednesday.
La Nina, or 'Little Girl' in Spanish, is an unusual cooling pattern that
usually brings rain to eastern and northern Australia and to Southeast Asia,
a major producing region of coffee, cocoa, rubber, sugar, palm oil and rice.
In its latest update, the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said the
sea surface was about 1.5 degrees Celsius colder than normal across the
central and eastern equatorial Pacific.
"We expect that these conditions will continue until the first quarter of
2008," WMO scientific officer Leslie Malone told a news conference in
Geneva.
The current event has strayed from normal trends, and has not brought
rainfall to the region, Malone said, attributing this to cool sea
temperatures across the north of Australia to the Indian Ocean, which had
altered expected weather patterns.
"As long as this situation continues, it is expected to lead to unusual
climate patterns in surrounding continental regions, ones that are atypical
of La Nina," WMO said in its update.
"Rains have been unusually heavy in parts of eastern Africa, while dry
conditions have persisted in many parts of Australia."
Australia is gripped by its worst drought in 100 years, resulting in crop
failures that have propelled wheat prices to record highs. The country last
experienced wetter-than-usual weather in 1999 through 2000 as a result of La
Nina, which is normally characterised by incessant rainfall, storms and
floods.
The La Nina weather pattern occurs about every three to five years and often
follows El Nino, a warming of Pacific waters, which can also wreak havoc on
weather around the world.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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