Interdecadal warming of warm pool triggers early South China Sea monsoon onset.
The onset date of the South China Sea summer monsoon shifted earlier in the late 1990s, compared to the previous two decades. This change was linked to a warming of the tropical Western Pacific warm pool, which caused stronger convection and a weaker western Pacific subtropical high in the spring. The shift in the monsoon onset date was a direct result of these changes in the atmospheric and oceanic conditions.