By Rebecca Lindsey

2 August 2016 (NOAA) – A record-smashing hurricane season in the central North Pacific. Water rationing in Puerto Rico. The biggest one-year jump in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations on record. Severe drought in Ethiopia. The hottest global surface temperature—by one of the largest margins—on record. Those are just a few of 2015’s major climate happenings documented in the recently released State of the Climate 2015 report from NOAA and the American Meteorological Society. While the events were scattered across the globe, they all had one thing in common: they were all connected to one of the three strongest El Ninõs in the historical record.

A Pacific pattern with a global echo

El Niño is the warm phase of a natural climate pattern called “ENSO,” which is short for El Niño-Southern Oscillation. During El Niño, the prevailing winds near the equator in the Pacific relax. Surface waters in the central and eastern Pacific warm up. A major hotspot of tropical rainfall and convection (rising air) develops over the warm waters. The warm up for the 2015 El Niño event actually began in 2014. Monthly sea surface temperatures in a key ENSO-monitoring region hit the El Niño threshold—0.5°C above average—in October 2014 and remained elevated through winter. But the atmosphere didn’t fully start cooperating until March 2015, when NOAA forecasters declared El Niño officially underway. By December 2015*, however, disruptions in temperature, rainfall, and surface air pressure across the tropical Pacific were on par with two of the strongest El Niños in the historical record: 1982 and 1997. Because of the Pacific Ocean’s tremendous size, disturbances there can lead to climate disturbances around the globe. To the rest of the global atmosphere, the arrival of El Niño in the Pacific is like a giant ringing a bell so loudly that it knocks the dishes off the shelves in a house down the street. The atmosphere hears the echoes from El Niño from thousands of miles away.

Some of the 2015 El Niño’s loudest “echoes”

Every El Niño is somewhat different, even strong ones. Still, many regions experienced climate extremes and anomalies in 2015 that are typical of El Niño years. Pulled from the State of the Climate report, here are some of the loudest echoes of the 2015 El Niño.

Record-smashing hurricane season in the central North Pacific

Sixteen tropical cyclones formed in or passed through the unusually warm central Pacific hurricane basin in 2015. That’s more than 3 times the 1981–2010 average of 4.7 cyclones per season, and 4 more than the previous record of 12, set in 1992 (also an El Niño year). In late August, the basin sustained three Category 4 hurricanes at the same time, which was a first, not just for the central Pacific basin, but for any basin during the modern record.

500-year drought in the Caribbean

Temperatures were high and rainfall was low across the entire Caribbean in 2015. Ten island nations experienced severe drought. Emergency water rationing occurred in St. Lucia and in San Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico. In Antigua, the 1-billion-gallon reservoir behind the Potworks Dam went dry. Sixty-five percent of the island’s farmers went out of business. Rainfall deficits were the largest on record dating back to 1928. The return period for rainfall so low is estimated to be 1 in 500 years.

New global temperature record

The global average surface temperature in 2015 came in first in the race for warmest year on record, beating out the previous record—set in 2014—by 0.13°–0.18°C, depending on the datas et. This wasn’t just a new record for warmth, it was also the largest margin by which one year has beaten another since 1998 (which was also an El Niño year!).