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 tools scientists have relied on for decades to track El Niño and La Niña are breaking down, and the reason is ...
Rare blizzard conditions hit the Outer Banks last month and back-to-back winter storms left ice on the ground for days in ...
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.
The U.S. cattle and beef industry enters 2026 with strong but volatile market conditions, as historically tight cattle ...
The Pacific Ocean is warming so quickly that scientists had to find a new method for detecting and predicting El Niño and La ...
The El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a natural pattern of ocean and atmospheric changes in the tropical Pacific Ocean that can influence the weather pattern ...
By Ben Noll For the second time in as many months, a wind burst occurred in a remote part of the western Pacific Ocean during January – and odds are rising that it will ...
New satellite data from NASA shows snow coverage across the western U.S. has reached historic lows, a signal of what scientists call a snow drought. Below-average snowpack can impact water supplies, ...
The latest climate forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows that an El Niño climate ...