Cars move on a street in Beijing's Central Business District (CBD) as the city is shrouded in smog, in China, 1 November 2023; Credit: Reuters/Tingshu Wang

BEIJING (Reuters) - Temperatures in northern China are set to plunge as much as 20 degrees Celsius after the second-warmest October in decades, but warmer-than-usual conditions could soon be back under the influence of El Niño.

A stream of cold air entering China on Saturday 4 November 2023 from the northwest will join one that arrived on Thursday 2 November 2023 to push temperatures sharply lower, the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) said.

In the sparsely populated deserts and grasslands of the northern Inner Mongolia region, temperatures could plummet on Friday 3 November and again from Saturday 4 November 2023 while blizzards could hit the Xinjiang region in the northwest.

From next week, most of the northeast is expected to see maximum temperatures dive to the single-digits or below freezing as cold air moves east and south, in an abrupt reversal of a recent "big warming", the CMA said.

While freezing temperatures are not uncommon for the time of year, the sudden change is unusual.

A few days ago, uncharacteristically warm weather saw parts of northern China post record high temperatures exceeding 30 °C.

Weather has become more extreme in China in recent years, destroying urban infrastructure as well as farmland, causing hefty economic losses and raising fears about the pace and impact of global warming.

This summer, typhoons dumped historic rainfall in inland regions unaccustomed to tropical storms. Typhoon Doksuri caused the worst flooding since 1963 in the Hai river basin that encompasses Beijing, Tianjin and Hebei province.

Authorities are due to issue 1 trillion yuan (approx. €129 billion) of sovereign bonds to help rebuild areas hit by the floods and improve infrastructure to cope with disasters.

Earlier in the year, northern China basked in unseasonal heat, with temperatures reaching summer-levels, shortly after a very cold January, when the northernmost city of Mohe saw the temperature dip to a record minus 53 °C.

Winter this year, however, could be warmer due to a moderate El Niño, Jia Xiaolong, deputy director of China's National Climate Centre, told a press conference on Friday.

El Niño is a natural climate pattern associated with warming of the ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific. The phenomenon occurs every two to seven years, lasting nine to twelve months.

"The sea surface temperature in the east-central equatorial Pacific will continue to exceed 0.5 °C in November and the El Niño event will persist in the 2023/2024 winter, with a peak intensity of 1.5-2 °C," Jia said.

But statistics showed that winter temperatures could fluctuate greatly during El Niño, Jia warned.