University of Texas researchers discuss with Meteorologist Feddy Vela how El Nino and La Nina weather patterns and global water movement impact rain, drought and everything in between.
El Niño may take shape later this year, and the ripple effects could show up in U.S. weather during the second half of 2026.
The Climate Prediction Center issued its latest ENSO Diagnostic Discussion on February 12, 2026, confirming that La Niña is fading and that ENSO-neutral conditions are favored to persist through ...
The worst drought in 25 years will continue through at least April, said forecasters, as will warmer-than-average ...
The National Weather Service predicts a La Niña will exit soon, uncharacteristically leaving behind a puny snowpack in Oregon and Washington.
Rare blizzard conditions hit the Outer Banks last month and back-to-back winter storms left ice on the ground for days in ...
A look at what we know and don't yet know about how climate change could affect the paths of these storms — and the all-important question of how often they'll make landfall.
While we’re still quite a ways out from the official start of hurricane season, and even more so from the climatological peak, but here are key variables we are looking at for hurricane season.
Florida is experiencing its worst drought in 25 years, leading to burn bans and increased wildfire risk. Learn how the ...
Scientists are rethinking how they track Pacific Ocean temperatures as global warming reshapes climate patterns. A simple yet ...
The Pacific Ocean is warming so quickly that scientists had to find a new method for detecting and predicting El Niño and La Niña events.
El Niño might be back later this year; major climate agencies that closely watch the tropical Pacific have recently updated ...