NOAA's Climate Prediction Center (CPC) announced Thursday that water temperatures in critical parts of the Pacific Ocean had ...
The pattern had been predicted to form for several months, and weak La Niña conditions were finally officially met this week.
La Niña, the periodic cooling of Pacific Ocean waters, has finally arrived, but forecasters predict it is weak and unlikely to cause as many weather problems as typically seen.
The Pacific Northwest, Midwest and Northeast are expected to face above-average precipitation, according to NOAA. States with ...
El Niño events—periodic warming of sea surface temperatures in the Pacific—are among the most influential drivers of global ...
These weeks-long precipitation pauses are a normal part of winter for this region. Over the past 20 years, the average length ...
La Niña has finally emerged after months of anticipation, but there’s a catch, and it could impact its influence on the ...
Weather patterns across the U.S. and the world from October through December resembled patterns from previous La Niña events.
LITTLE-KNOWN WEATHER PATTERN WHEN EL NIÑO AND LA NIÑA ARE NO LONGER IN CONTROL Forecast of sea-surface temperature anomalies for the critical region of the Pacific Ocean where El Niño and La ...
Eeva Ruuska, Americas Head of Intelligence at Riskline, has shared her thoughts on the arrival ofLa Niña and the impact it is ...
It's not great news for the Gulf Coast and other storm-prone regions: La Niña is associated with more tropical activity in ...