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China Forecasts Moderate-or-Stronger El Nino, Warns of Tighter Energy, Fuel Squeeze

BEIJING, April 20 (Reuters) - China might have to burn more fossil fuels this year as ​meteorologists forecast a moderate-or-stronger El Nino weather event in the summer ‌and autumn, which could disrupt operations at hydropower stations across the region at a time when fuel supplies from the Middle East are disrupted.

China's National Climate Centre expects El ​Nino conditions to emerge in May and said an El Nino ​event would last at least through the end of the ⁠year, according to an analysis published by the China Meteorological Administration over ​the weekend.t

El Nino is a natural weather pattern linked to a warming of ​the central and eastern Pacific, bringing heavier rainfall to the Pacific coast of the Americas. In the Western Pacific, the shift can disrupt the East Asian monsoon, raising the odds ​of flooding in southern China and drought in other Chinese regions.

Flooding caused ​by a severe El Nino event can damage power grid infrastructure, while both excessive rainfall ‌and ⁠drought can require hydropower dams to reduce or even halt output, senior meteorologist Wang Yaqi said in the CMA's analysis. El Nino can have a severe impact on hydropower-dependent regions, Wang added.

"Reduced hydropower output often forces energy systems ​to switch to ​fossil-fuel generation, driving ⁠up ... the cost of energy imports and creating a vicious climate-energy-economic cycle," the government meteorologist said.

China, the world's top ​energy importer and leading hydropower generator, has already curtailed fuel exports ​to ⁠countries including Malaysia and Australia, as the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran squeezes global energy supply.

Increased autumn rainfall in China's southern regions as a result of El Nino ⁠also ​raises the risk of disruption to the harvest ​of late-season rice, while warmer-than-usual winter conditions could reduce available water supplies for next year's spring ​ploughing.

Reporting by Xiuhao Chen and Ryan Woo; Editing by Himani Sarkar, Kirsten Donovan

Source: Reuters


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