A weak La Nina event has arrived in the Pacific, bringing colder waters and potentially cooler weather. Despite being delayed ...
It has two opposite states: El Niño and La Niña, both of which significantly alter global weather. El Niño can be identified by a number of different measurements, including: warmer-than-usual ...
The planet-cooling climate pattern known as La Niña is here, scientists said Thursday, but it cannot prevent 2025 from being ...
Lately, it's been cold and wet, but La Niña's cooler Pacific Ocean waters near the equator foretell a warmer, drier winter ...
The last El Niño, the periodic warming of Pacific Ocean waters, finished in June 2024. NOAA forecasters have been expecting La Niña for months. The previous La Niña concluded in 2023 after an ...
The phenomenon is expected to last until April, with more humidity in Central America and northern South America, and more ...
Spring warmth that is projected for March and April means we need to be ready for the possibility of an active start to the ...
After much of the world experienced the hottest year on record in 2024, the U.S. has seen a lot of cold and snow for January. This warmth was partly fueled by a strong El Nino that peaked last year ...
La Niña has arrived and is likely to be impacting the winter season, including how much snow and rain New England might see ...
La Niña is usually associated with drier conditions across the southern part of the U.S. and wetter conditions to the north.
Climate change is supercharging these weather cycles, which are now causing a lot more damage than they used to.
Meteorologists say a weak La Nina weather event has arrived but will bring fewer storms than usual. Here's how the Pacific El Nino and La Nina weather phases can influence extreme weather globally.