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Image Credit: Scientific Frontline / NOAA |
The Planet's Most Powerful Climate Cycle
In 1997, a climatic event of unprecedented scale began to unfold in the tropical Pacific Ocean. Dubbed the "El Niño of the century," it triggered a cascade of extreme weather that reshaped global patterns for over a year. It unleashed devastating floods and droughts, sparked massive forest fires, decimated marine ecosystems, and crippled national economies. By the time it subsided in 1998, the event was estimated to have caused more than 22,000 deaths and inflicted over $36 billion in damages worldwide. Nearly two decades later, the powerful 2015-16 El Niño, supercharged by a background of long-term global warming, helped propel 2016 to become the hottest year on record and directly impacted the lives and livelihoods of over 60 million people.
These catastrophic events are not random acts of nature but manifestations of the planet's most powerful and influential climate cycle: the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). This naturally occurring phenomenon is a periodic, irregular fluctuation of sea surface temperatures and atmospheric pressure across the vast expanse of the equatorial Pacific Ocean. At its heart are two opposing phases: El Niño ("The Little Boy" in Spanish), a significant warming of the ocean surface, and La Niña ("The Little Girl"), a countervailing cooling. Together with a neutral "in-between" state, they form a planetary-scale pendulum that swings irregularly every two to seven years, dictating patterns of drought and flood, storm and calm, across the globe.