Did you Know…..?
Scientists at the NOAA Climate Prediction Center
reported today that El Niño conditions have developed in the tropical
Pacific and are likely to continue into early 2007. Ocean temperatures
increased remarkably in the equatorial Pacific during the last two weeks.
"Currently, weak El Niño conditions exist, but there is a potential
for this event to strengthen into a moderate event by winter," said
Vernon Kousky, NOAA's lead El Niño forecaster. The development of weak El
Niño conditions helps explain why this Atlantic hurricane season has been
less active than was previously expected. Typical El Niño effects are
likely to develop over North America during the upcoming winter season.
Those include warmer-than-average temperatures over western and central
Canada, and over the western and northern United States.
Wetter-than-average conditions are likely over portions of the U.S. Gulf
Coast and Florida, while drier-than-average conditions can be expected in
the Ohio Valley and the Pacific Northwest.