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rjn2@columbia.edu Feb. 1, 1999

Columbia Climate Researcher, In Public Forum, To Discuss Limits of Forecasting El Ni–o

 

The recurrent warming of the eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean known as El Ni–o set record highs last year. Sea surface temperatures rose 11 degrees Fahrenheit and chaotic weather plagued the Pacific rim and elsewhere.

But scientists missed the event. Computer models developed in several laboratories around the world, including that of Mark A. Cane and Stephen E. Zebiak at Columbia Universityâs Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, failed to predict the severity of the 1997-98 El Ni–o, demonstrating the limits of physical models.

Now Dr. Cane, a Columbia climate scientist who with Dr. Zebiak was the first to develop computer models designed to predict El Ni–o, will examine last yearâs severe event and use it to illustrate the perils and potential of climate forecasting. He will deliver the 77th University Lecture Feb. 15 at 8 P.M. in the Rotunda of Low Memorial Library on Columbia's Morningside Heights campus, West 116th Street and Broadway. There is no admission fee and the public is invited to attend.

Dr. Cane, the G. Unger Vetlesen Professor of Earth and Climate Sciences, became intrigued by El Ni–o after the severe winter of 1977 in the Northeast was blamed on the recurring phenomenon. The event of 1982-83, which caused $13 billion worldwide in weather-related crop damage, flooding, injury and death, not only was not predicted, but was not recognized as a single phenomenon even when well under way.

Working at Lamont, Columbiaâs earth sciences campus in Palisades, N.Y., Dr. Cane and his colleague, Dr. Zebiak, senior research scientist, by 1986 had developed the first computer model that successfully predicted the El Ni–os of the late 1980s. T he model is based on physical laws that simulate the complex interactions between ocean and atmosphere in the tropical Pacific, where the eastward migration of a large pool of warm water has worldwide climatic effects. In much of the tropics the conseque nces of El Ni–o are virtually certain, but in subtropical latitudes such as those occupied the United States, says Dr. Cane, El Ni–o must be viewed as creating a bias to prefer certain climatic patterns, rather than a sure thing.

In 1994, Dr. Cane and colleagues showed that information about El Ni–o could be used to predict corn harvests a year in advance and halfway around the globe in southern Africa, where the regionâs worst drought in a century affected nearly 100 milli on people in 1991-92. Expensive, large-scale relief efforts by local governments and the international community, including some $800 million by the United States, were needed to avert widespread famine. The drought could have been predicted with a high degree of confidence using computer models, Dr. Cane said.

To make use of the predictive capacities developed at Columbia and at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, in 1997 a new International Research Institute for Climate Prediction was formed as a partners hip among Columbia, Scripps and the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration. The IRI now distributes climate forecasts several months to a year in advance to decision makers around the globe. Scientists work actively with farmers, fisherma n, relief workers, transportation experts, water resource and utilities mangers and others to find the best way to use this forecast information to avoid or reduce the human and economic devastation caused by extreme weather.

This document is available at http://www.columbia.edu/cu/pr/. Working press may receive science and technology press releases via e-mail by sending a message to opa@columbia.edu.

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