India Braces for La Niña’s Return

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India Braces for La Niña’s Return

Context: Weather experts have warned that India could face an intense cold wave during the winter of 2025-26 (December-January). This prediction is significant especially after the Triple Dip La Nina (2020-23)

La Niña is the “cool phase” of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle—a natural climate phenomenon marked by unusually cold sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. It happens when stronger-than-normal trade winds push warm water westward, causing cool, nutrient-rich water to upwell in the east.

India Braces for La Niña's Return

How Does La Niña Impact Indian Weather?

La Niña’s influence on Indian weather is delivered through “teleconnections,” or long-distance atmospheric links.

  • Stronger Winter Monsoon (North-East Monsoon): For peninsular India, particularly Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, and Kerala, La Niña years often bring a good North-East Monsoon, leading to higher rainfall between October and December.
  • Colder Winter Temperatures over North India: This is the primary impact highlighted in the current forecast. The mechanism involves:
    • Change in Jet Stream Patterns: La Niña tends to alter the path of the sub-tropical westerly jet stream, a high-altitude wind current that greatly influences winter weather in North India.
    • Deeper Troughs and More Western Disturbances: The jet stream develops deeper north-south waves (troughs). These troughs scoop out cold air from higher latitudes and pull it down towards northern parts of the Indian subcontinent.
    • Increased Frequency of Cold Wave Conditions: This influx of cold, dry air leads to a higher number of cold wave days, where minimum temperatures drop significantly below normal. Dense fog and prolonged cold spells are also more common.
  • Positive Impact on Summer Monsoon: La Niña has a strong correlation with above-average rainfall during India’s Southwest Summer Monsoon (June-September). The cooling in the Pacific shifts convection patterns, strengthening the monsoon circulation.
  • Air quality trends
    • Poor quality in Peninsular India: Relatively slower winds near the surface, traps pollutants and notably increases PM2.5 concentration.
    • Improved Air quality in Northern India: Weaker western disturbances with absence of rain and clouds and faster ventilation led to a significant improvement in air quality in the North. However, contrary observations can also be registered with interplay of multitude factors. 
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