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El Nino

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: IT

Subject: Geography

Context: Researchers at Duke University have identified that ocean salinity can amplify the intensity of El Niño by approximately 20%.

About El Nino:

What it is?

• El Niño (meaning “Little Boy” in Spanish) is a recurring climate pattern characterized by the unusual warming of surface waters in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. It is the warm phase of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle and typically occurs every two to seven years.

How it Forms?

Normal Conditions: Strong trade winds blow from east to west along the equator, pushing warm surface water toward Asia. This allows cold, nutrient-rich water to rise (upwelling) near the coast of South America.

Weakening Winds: During El Niño, these trade winds weaken or even reverse direction.

Warm Water Shift: The warm water that was piled up in the western Pacific begins to flow back eastward toward the Americas.

Atmospheric Disruption: This shift in heat alters the Pacific jet stream, disrupting global weather patterns, leading to floods in some regions and droughts in others.

Factors Influencing El Niño:

Trade Wind Strength: The primary driver; weaker winds trigger the eastward movement of warm water.

Ocean-Atmosphere Coupling: A feedback loop where warming water further weakens winds, which in turn warms the water more.

Thermocline Depth: The depth of the transition layer between warm surface water and cold deep water influences how much heat is available to fuel the event.

Rossby and Kelvin Waves: Large-scale internal ocean waves that transport heat across the Pacific.

Implications for India:

A stronger El Niño directly impacts India’s food and water security:

Monsoon Suppression: It pulls moisture away from South Asia, frequently resulting in below-normal rainfall.

Drought Risk: There is a 60% likelihood of drought in various regions during a strong El Niño year.

Agricultural Impact: Drier conditions lead to food grain shortfalls, as seen in 2023, which saw the driest August in years and triggered food inflation.

Heatwaves: El Niño often correlates with higher-than-average temperatures and prolonged heatwaves during the Indian summer.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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