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.
Climate change-related struggles in the borderlands are increasing, with numerous effects, including on migration.
Rare blizzard conditions hit the Outer Banks last month and back-to-back winter storms left ice on the ground for days in parts of North Carolina.
Morning Overview on MSN
Global warming just forced scientists to rethink El Niño from scratch
The tools scientists have relied on for decades to track El Niño and La Niña are breaking down, and the reason is ...
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.
Florida is experiencing its worst drought in 25 years, leading to burn bans and increased wildfire risk. Learn how the ...
The Pacific Ocean is warming so quickly that scientists had to find a new method for detecting and predicting El Niño and La ...
IFLScience on MSN
El Niño may be brewing in the Pacific, threatening a worrying trend for 2026 and 2027
Two major weather agencies think it's increasingly likely that El Niño will form in the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean later this year. If these forecasts hold, we could face a dramatic reshuffling of ...
Kasetsart University economist Dr Witsanu Attavanich says Thailand has entered the “mid-phase” of El Niño, with full ...
The demand for electricity can have a ripple effect that raises prices for everyone else. For example, if utilities build ...
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 ...
The latest climate forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows that an El Niño climate ...
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