The colossal bushfires that tore through Australia in 2019 and 2020 charred some 37,500 square miles, obliterating iconic ecosystems and pushing already-threatened species to the brink. The blazes were so big they spawned their own towering thunderclouds.
Thousands of miles away, clear across the Pacific Ocean, the bushfires were affecting something more subtle yet very consequential: New modeling shows that the smoke helped cool the waters off South America, greatly increasing the chances of the rare three-year La Niña that ensued. That’s the band of chilled water in the Pacific that lasted from late 2020 to early 2023. La Niña influences weather around the world, so the bushfires ended up having a widespread effect, long after the last embers stopped glowing in Australia.
“It skewed the probabilities toward a La Niña event for multiple years,” says John Fasullo, a climate scientist at the US National Center for Atmospheric Research and lead author of a new paper describing the modeling, which was published today in Science Advances. “This is actually—in terms of the historical records—one of the largest perturbations to the Southern Hemisphere that we've seen.”
Check out the map above. As fires raged in Australia in December 2019, smoke (high concentrations are shown in red) blew not only across the Pacific Ocean but also wrapped around the Southern Hemisphere. Up in the atmosphere, those innumerable aerosol particles—charred plant material, even bits of structures that had burned—became little nuclei for water to condense upon. This is how clouds form normally, when water aggregates around dust particles. But in the Southern Hemisphere, there aren’t a whole lot of these nuclei blowing around. (In the Northern Hemisphere, there are more land masses to provide particulate matter.)
“Having this huge source of the Australian wildfires actually had a big effect and created all these cloud condensation nuclei. And, in turn, that made the clouds brighter,” says Fasullo.