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Summer is coming, and so is La Niña.. According to the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center, there is a 49% chance of La Niña developing between June and August this year, and ...
El Paso expects another scorching summer and warm winter due to La Niña, with a 40% chance 2024 will be the hottest year on record, according to NWS. La Niña is pushing El Niño out. What that ...
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has forecast a mild winter for Texans, with warmer-than-usual temperatures and less precipitation.
La Niña’s arrival was a long time coming Long-range forecasters at the CPC first raised the possibility of a switch to La Niña back in February 2024 when El Niño was still very strong.
A typical La Niña pattern produces a wetter, cooler winter over the northern U.S., while drier, milder weather takes hold of the South. While there have been important caveats that go against the ...
In Texas, La Nina generally means drought. As the ground dries up with lack of rain during a La Nina year, it generates an abundance of heat. North Texas experienced that in the summer of 2023 as ...
La Niña isn’t here yet, but has a 60% chance of emerging through November, according to the Climate Prediction Center. Once it arrives, it’ll stick around all winter and likely persist into ...
A La Niña in 2010 is evident by the large pool of cooler-than-normal (blue and purple) water stretching from the eastern to the central Pacific Ocean.