'Monster' El Nino could cause flooding and erosion on B.C. coast: professor - Action News
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British Columbia

'Monster' El Nino could cause flooding and erosion on B.C. coast: professor

The "monster" El Nino weather system expected to hit Canada's West Coast later this fall and winter could lead to higher tides, flooding and erosion in low-lying coastal areas, according to a professor at the University of Victoria.

This winter's El Nino is expected to rival the strongest on record, which hit in 1997-98

B.C. should brace for the kind of severe coastal erosion California experienced during the 2009-10 El Nino, said Univ. of Victoria professor Ian Walker. This photo shows severe bluff erosion from storm damage along the Southern end of Ocean Beach, near San Francisco. On average, the shoreline was eroded 55 meters that winter. (Jeff Hansen/U.S. Geological Service)

The "monster" El Nino weather system expected to hit Canada's West Coast later this fall and winter could lead to higher tides, flooding and erosion in low-lying coastal areas, according to a professor at the University of Victoria.

Ian Walker's warning which clarifies what B.C. can expect from this year's much-talked-about El Nino comes out of part of a larger study researchers from five countries bordering the Pacific who looked into El Nino and La Nina weather systems. The study was published this week in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Thirteen researchers from universities and government agencies tried to determine if patterns in coastal change, such as erosionand flooding, could be connected to major climate cycles, like El Nino and La Nina, across the Pacific.

Walker, a geography professor whose specialties include beach and dune systems, coastal erosion and climate-change impacts, said he contributed data collected from the west coast of Vancouver Island, between Tofino and Ucluelet.

"What makes B.C. kind of distinct in the broader Pacific Basin is that we see coastal erosion and flooding responses for both El Nino and La Nina," said Walker.

"Now this year is a pretty monster El Nino, probably the largest ever witnessed. We know that in past El Ninos from here to California we've seen some of the highest historic rates of erosion. So we can prepare for that and we've seen that signal in our data."

Higher ocean levels expected

El Nino is a natural ocean temperature phenomenon, in which warm water near the equator in the Pacific moves towards South America's northern coast and then turns northward, as far as Haida Gwaii and Alaska, said Walker.

"As warm things expand, we see a higher water level, on the order of tens of centimetres, depending on where you are," said Walker. "The tides and storms are then superimposed on top of that."

The result can be higher ocean-water levels, he said.

"This is a big El Nino year, so we should be prepared but we should also be prepared as much for the La Nina which could follow in a couple years," said Walker.

The U.S. Geological Survey said in a news release that the research was important because the impact of El Nino and La Nina have not been included in studies about rising sea levels and coastal vulnerability.

Other universities that participated in the study included the University of Sydney and the University of New South Wales in Australia and New Zealand's University of Waikato.