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Ocean currents - El Nino, La Nina, PDO and AMO

Posted by Administrator (admin) on 8th February, 2010
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Ocean currents affects the global temperatures. In the northern Pacific rules the “PDO” (”Pacific Decadial Oscillation”) :

 

The PDO change between a cooling and a warming phase as shown above. NASA announced in the spring 2008 that the PDO had changed into the cold phase. The phases of the PDO can last for 30 years, and thus one might say that PDO going into the cold phase was perhaps the biggest headline in climate science 2008? The Climate models on which the IPCC AR4 is based are not PDO data.

 

The tropical Pacific also changes between a warming and a cooling phase. The ”ENSO Index” above shows the warm phase, El Nino (red) and the cool phase, La Nina (blue).

El Nino´s and La Nina´s only last typically 12 to 18 months. However the EL Nino and La Nina effect is heavily influencing global temperatures.

The PDO phases are more vague in global temperatures, but the PDO effect might be that PDO to some degree influences the formation of the Tropical Pacific currents, El Nino and La Nina. If so, the present PDO suggests that the coming decades will mostly see cooling La Ninas in the tropical pacific. AMO: See ”Arctic sea ice minimum 2007, AMO”

Last changed: 8th February, 2010 at 10:21:10

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