Is YOUR country at risk from El Niño? Maps plot the regions most likely to be affected by floods and extreme weather

- El Niño - a heating of sea temperatures in the Pacific - affects winds and can trigger both floods and droughts
- Scientists have now mapped how flood risks change when an El Niño and its opposite, La Niña, hit the oceans
- They found 44 per cent of river basins around world saw changes in 100-year flood risks during these events
- Biggest increases in flood risk were found in southwest US, parts of southern South America and Horn of Africa
- But it also found that the Sahel region of Africa and most of Australia saw the biggest decreases in flood risks
Warm water is brewing in the Pacific, resurrecting claims that a much-anticipated El Niño may be on its way.
El Niño - a heating of sea-surface temperatures in the Pacific - affects wind patterns and can trigger both floods and droughts in different parts of the globe.
Now, for the first time, scientists have mapped how flood risks change across the world when an extreme El Niño hits the oceans.
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Their study shows how some areas are exposed to dangerous floods that can damage buildings, put people's lives at danger, while other areas get a reprieve from drought.
'A lot of scientific effort has been put into modelling physical hazards themselves,' Philip Ward, who led the new study told Discovery News.
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'Only much more recently have we started looking at the damage and being able to model that damage.'
According to a report by Roz Pidcock at Carbon Brief, the latest map was created using detailed hydrological models.
WHAT ARE EL NINO AND LA NINA?
El Niño and La Niña are opposite phases of what is known as the El Niño/Southern Oscillation (Enso) cycle, says the NOAA.
The Enso cycle is a scientific term that describes the fluctuations in temperature between the ocean and atmosphere in the east-central Equatorial Pacific (approximately between the International Date Line and 120 degrees West).
La Niña is sometimes referred to as the cold phase of Enso and El Niño as the warm phase.
These deviations from normal surface temperatures can have large-scale impacts not only on ocean processes, but also on global weather and climate.
El Niño and La Niña episodes typically last nine to 12 months, but some prolonged events may last for years.
They often begin to form between June and August, reach peak strength between December and April, and then decay between May and July of the following year.
While their periodicity can be quite irregular, El Niño and La Niña events occur about every three to five years. Typically, El Niño occurs more frequently than La Niña.
Researchers at Amsterdam's Global Change Institute compared the amount of flooding in El Niño and La Niña years to the average from all years between 1958 to 2000.
The study also looked at its opposite phase, La Niña, which occurs when winds in the equatorial Pacific causes a shift to cooler than normal ocean temperatures.
It found that 44 per cent of river basins around the world saw changes in 100-year flood risks during El Niño or La Niña years.
In one map, around 34 per cent of the world's land area experiences a change in the amount of flooding in El Niño years, compared to 38 per cent in La Niña years.
The biggest increases in flood risk were found in southwest United States, parts of southern South America and the Horn of Africa.
Meanwhile, the Sahel region of Africa and most of Australia saw the biggest decreases in flood risks.
The researchers also looked at how the weather pattern cause economic damage caused by flooding.
In El Niño years, 10 per cent of the globe sees higher than normal damages, while 19 per cent sees lower than normal.
The red colour in the map below shows regions where flooding decreases in El Niño or La Niña years. A darker the red, the lower the risk compared to normal.
'There have been studies [showing] that some areas get more rainfall during El Niño years, but more rainfall doesn't necessarily mean more floods,' Professor Ward said.
'So we're looking at the actual flooding and damages caused by flooding.'
These don't always match an increase in rainfall. For instance, the southeast of the US is often cooler and wetter during an El Niño, but the impact of flooding as a whole wasn't severe.
Scientists recently suggested that Ecuador is about to be hit by eastward-moving waves of warm water, suggesting that El Niño may be on its way.
The most recent waves increase the chances that parched California could be in for some relief - albeit small - if weather patterns take a turn later this year.
But Nasa has warned that 'fickle' El Niño will likely be weak if it does appear, providing only limited relief for a drought-ridden west coast.
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