Pacific Ocean waters have risen closer to average temperatures, ending the multi-year La Niña phenomenon that brought drought to the western Americas.
whatever that means anymoreThere’s about a 60% chance that the Pacific warms up enough to slingshot the world into El Niño conditions by the fall, the ENSO post
said. Though, the forecasters added that predictions made in the spring are notoriously unreliable. The Climate Prediction Center hasn’t yet instituted an official El Niño watch.If El Niño were to happen before summer, the U.S. could expect an abnormally light hurricane season.would also likely bring wet conditions to the Southwest, dry weather to some eastern states, and warm temperatures to many northern states.
The ENSO cycle is a fluctuation that occurs separately from human-caused climate change. But that doesn’t mean the two aren’t linked. Research suggests
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