El Niño and La Niña are natural phenomena that occur when the Pacific Ocean and atmosphere shift from their neutral state for several seasons. El Niño is associated with warming of the central and eastern tropical Pacific, while La Niña is the reverse with cooling of these areas. They occur every few years and can impact global weather patterns and temperatures. The effects of each tend to be opposite, such as stronger hurricanes in some regions during El Niño and weaker during La Niña. Climate change may impact how often and strongly El Niño and La Niña events occur in the future.
El Niño and La Niña are natural phenomena that occur when the Pacific Ocean and atmosphere shift from their neutral state for several seasons. El Niño is associated with warming of the central and eastern tropical Pacific, while La Niña is the reverse with cooling of these areas. They occur every few years and can impact global weather patterns and temperatures. The effects of each tend to be opposite, such as stronger hurricanes in some regions during El Niño and weaker during La Niña. Climate change may impact how often and strongly El Niño and La Niña events occur in the future.
El Niño and La Niña are natural phenomena that occur when the Pacific Ocean and atmosphere shift from their neutral state for several seasons. El Niño is associated with warming of the central and eastern tropical Pacific, while La Niña is the reverse with cooling of these areas. They occur every few years and can impact global weather patterns and temperatures. The effects of each tend to be opposite, such as stronger hurricanes in some regions during El Niño and weaker during La Niña. Climate change may impact how often and strongly El Niño and La Niña events occur in the future.
El Niño and La Niña are natural phenomena that occur when the Pacific Ocean and atmosphere shift from their neutral state for several seasons. El Niño is associated with warming of the central and eastern tropical Pacific, while La Niña is the reverse with cooling of these areas. They occur every few years and can impact global weather patterns and temperatures. The effects of each tend to be opposite, such as stronger hurricanes in some regions during El Niño and weaker during La Niña. Climate change may impact how often and strongly El Niño and La Niña events occur in the future.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 11
What are El Niño and La Niña
El Niño and La Niña events are a natural part of the
global climate system. They occur when the Pacific Ocean and the atmosphere above it change from their neutral ('normal') state for several seasons. El Niño events are associated with a warming of the central and eastern tropical Pacific, while La Niña events are the reverse, with a sustained cooling of these same areas. Why they are called El Niño and La Niña The term El Niño translates from Spanish as 'the boy- child'. Peruvian fishermen originally used the term to describe the appearance, around Christmas, of a warm ocean current off the South American coast. It is now the commonly accepted term to describe the warming of the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. La Niña translates as 'girl-child' and is the opposite ENSO phase to El Niño. What Causes El Niño? is caused by warmer water in the eastern Pacific Ocean. This water is warmer because as trade winds lessen or reverse their direction, winds from the west push warm surface water to the east in the direction of the continent of South America. What is the causes of La Niña Caused by a build-up of cooler-than-normal waters in the tropical Pacific, the area of the Pacific Ocean between the Tropic of Cancer and the Tropic of Capricorn. Unusually strong, eastward-moving trade winds and ocean currents bring this cold water to the surface, a process known as upwelling. How Does El Niño Affect Conditions? Typically, it comes around every five years and what usually happens is that warming in the oceans caused by the winds leads to diffusion of this warming all over the globe. It changes atmospheric pressures with consequences for rainfall, wind patterns, sea surface temperatures and can sometimes have a positive, and sometimes a negative effect on those systems (4). In Europe for example, El Niño reduces the instances of hurricanes in the Atlantic (8). The beginning of the El Niño system will be seen over North America in the preceding winter; typically they include: • Mild winter temperatures over western Canada and north western USA • Above average precipitation in the Gulf Coast, including Florida • A drier than average period in Ohio and pacific northwest The effects of El Niño can sometime be erratic and are not always be predictable. For example, conditions at the start of 2014 were remarkably similar to the 1997/8 ENSO event and so therefore it was expected to be an El Niño year. Yet, as late as August, the initial warning signs were not appearing in the atmosphere to precede warming in the oceans meaning that the likelihood of El Niño occurring was dropping off but not entirely eliminated (5). Whether this is another effect of climate change is yet to be seen. However, some oceanographic institutes still predict that El Niño will take place in the autumn months, pointing to warming throughout August and the sometimes late nature of the development of El Niño (6). How Does La Niña Affect Conditions? Like El Niño, it too affects atmospheric pressure and temperature, rainfall and ocean temperature. In Europe, El Niño reduces the number of autumnal hurricanes. La Niña has less of an effect in Europe but it does tend to lead to milder winters in Northern Europe (the United Kingdom especially) and colder winters in southern/western Europe (12) leading to snow in the Mediterranean region. Elsewhere in the world, areas that are affected by La Niña experience the opposite of the effects they experience with El Niño. It is continental North America where most of these conditions are felt. The wider effects include Stronger winds along the equatorial region, especially in the Pacific • Decreased convection in the Pacific leading to a weaker jet stream • temperatures are above average in the southeast and below average in the northwest • Conditions are more favourable for hurricanes in the Caribbean and central Atlantic area • Greater instances of tornados in those states of the US already vulnerable to them Climate Change How El Niño and La Niña will change or affect climate change in the future is now of tremendous importance thanks to the known effects over the last century or more - and the conditions are still not very well understood, though the phenomenon has been known since the early 1600s (2). For climate scientists, this is a grey area as to whether it will have an impact on the climate, or whether they will be affected by climate change (14). Some recent research has suggested that the effects of the ENSO will worsen as the climate changes It is important for lives and livelihood, for economies and insurers to understand the potential for damage caused by extreme weather such as El Niño and La Niña so their continued study is of vital importance. Historical records have built up to the point that researchers have a clear idea of what the likely effects of each ENSO is likely to be in any given year. A paper in 2013 compiled the effects from records going back 700 years and how they have impacted global conditions in this time (2). The question is not settled, though many scientific institutes have devoted much time to the study of the ENSO (15) and conflicting data says that ENSO may become the increasing norm.