Three experts explain why La Niña provides no relief from the excess planetary heating due to rising greenhouse gases.
This year's hole in the ozone layer was slightly smaller than last year, and well below the peak size in 2006.
U.S. Winter Outlook: Warmer, drier South with ongoing La Niña
October 20, 2022
The month tied for fifth-warmest September on average for the globe. North America was record warm, while La Niña continued to chill the tropical Pacific.
Call it what you like—triple-dip, three-peat, three-bean salad—we are facing the third La Niña winter in a row.
Fifth-warmest September on record; heatwave brought record temperatures to the West.
It's October. So in addition to talk of ghouls and goblins, we must chat about the October 2022 climate outlook. The outlook favors a hotter-than-average month for the western and central United States, and a colder- and wetter-than-average month for the Mid-Atlantic.
August 2022 drew to a close the third-warmest summer on record for the contiguous United States.
It's all but a done deal: odds of La Niña this winter are higher than 90 percent. Plus a reminder list of why we care so much about La Niña.
The September 2022 climate outlook favors a warmer-than-average month for most of the contiguous United States along with a dry/wet split between the northern and southern tiers of the U.S.