I don’t have live access to current headlines right now. If you’d like, I can summarize the latest El Niño developments from trusted sources and point you to where to check for real-time updates.
Key sources to monitor for up-to-date El Niño news:
- NOAA Climate.gov ENSO updates and ENSO Diagnostic Discussions
- NOAA CPC ENSO Advisories
- WMO El Niño/La Niña Updates
- Major news outlets’ climate desks (e.g., CBS News, The Washington Post) and regional meteorological services
What to look for in the latest news:
- Whether El Niño conditions are ongoing, transitioning to neutral, or shifting toward La Niña
- Official forecasts for the next 6–12 months (probabilities of El Niño, neutral, or La Niña)
- Potential climate impacts: changes in global precipitation patterns, hurricane season activity in the Atlantic, drought risk in certain regions, and temperature anomalies
Would you like me to fetch and summarize the most recent articles from NOAA, WMO, and major outlets and provide direct links? If you want, I can also generate a quick one-page brief with the latest outlooks and likely regional impacts.
Sources
The WMO El Niño/La Niña Update is prepared approximately every three months through a collaborative effort between WMO and the International Research Institute for Climate and Society (IRI) as a contribution to the United Nations Inter-Agency Task Force on Natural Disaster Reduction. It is based on contributions from the leading centres around the world monitoring and predicting this phenomenon and expert consensus facilitated by WMO and IRI.More on El Niño / La Niña Monitoring and...
wmo.intOn the ENSO Blog's 10th anniversary, El Niño is in its last weeks and a transition to neutral conditions imminent. Our seasoned blogger discusses the outlook for later this year, and looks back at some of the global impacts of this El Niño.
www.climate.govClimate scientists estimate the warm weather pattern could begin to develop as early as May.
www.cbsnews.comLatest news on El Niño, the warm phase of the El Niño-La Niña climate pattern, which significantly alters global atmospheric circulation, affecting temperature
www.newsnow.co.ukLast summer, hundreds of millions of people were faced with triple-digit temperatures across the U.S. This year, it could happen again. Officials from the National Weather Service and the CDC are already warning Americans about record-high temperatures in the coming months thanks to seasonal changes in the La Niña climate pattern. With these rising temperatures, there's also a higher risk of wildfires and droughts. Scott Dance, a climate reporter for The Washington Post, joined CBS News to...
www.cbsnews.com