El Niño, after a period of dominance, has ended, paving the way for the emergence of La Niña. Forecasters anticipate La Niña to develop this summer and persist through the winter, potentially leading to drier conditions in California. The transition from El Niño to La Niña may result in cooler temperatures, but summers could be hotter than average, suggesting a potentially warmer and wilder 2024 compared to the previous year.
NOAA’s Updated 2024 Global Average Temperature Anomaly Trend Continues to Decline Indicating a Weaking El Nino and No “Climate Emergency” https://t.co/pbCO6YQJAG
El Niño has officially ended, and its cooler counterpart could be just around the corner. https://t.co/PKQ8hA76LG
El Niño is dead: What the transition to La Niña means for this summer and the upcoming winter https://t.co/Y9vjOv3Tds
The shift from El Niño to La Niña will see temperatures drop, but when one weather system swings to the other, summers tend to be hotter than average—meaning 2024 could be even warmer and wilder than last year. https://t.co/q3spMaAsRG
El Niño makes an exit, but La Niña could bring dry conditions back to California https://t.co/qdmXLmN6r7
El Niño is officially over. Next up? Forecasters expect La Niña to develop this summer and continue through the winter. Here’s what that means for California weather: https://t.co/zuASqFkWAf
After a year of dominance, El Niño’s wrath has come to end — but it’s climate-churning counterpart, La Niña, is hot on its heels and could signal a return to dryness for California. https://t.co/qdmXLmNEgF
El Niño is dead. Here’s what to expect in the coming months https://t.co/V9YWiWAevo