El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO)

GS 1 – Geography

  • ENSO is a recurring climate phenomenon in the tropical Pacific Ocean.
  • It involves interactions between the ocean and the atmosphere, leading to global weather fluctuations.
  • Two main phases: El Niño (warming) and La Niña (cooling), along with a neutral phase.
Components
  1. El Niño
    • Abnormal warming of central & eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean.
    • Weakening of trade winds.
    • Suppression of upwelling near South America.
  2. La Niña
    • Abnormal cooling of central & eastern equatorial Pacific.
    • Strengthening of trade winds.
    • Enhanced upwelling near South America.
  3. Southern Oscillation
    • Atmospheric component of ENSO.
    • Refers to periodic shift in air pressure between Tahiti (French Polynesia) & Darwin (Australia).
    • Measured using Southern Oscillation Index (SOI).
Global Impacts
  • Alters global wind & rainfall patterns.
  • Changes in jet streams, leading to extreme weather.
  • Impacts monsoons, cyclones, droughts, floods.
ENSO & India
  • El Niño → Weakening/Failure of Indian Summer Monsoon → Droughts (e.g., 2009).
  • La Niña → Stronger monsoon → Excess rainfall & floods (e.g., 2010, 2020).
  • Affects agriculture, food security, economy, water resources.
Monitoring & Prediction
  • Monitored by NOAA, IMD, World Meteorological Organization.
  • Indicators:
    • Sea Surface Temperature (SST) anomalies.
    • SOI values.
    • Equatorial Pacific trade winds & convection patterns.
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