Hot News 24/09/2025 23:19

La Niña Returns: Colder Winter Expected Worldwide

As 2025 moves toward its final months, climate experts are closely monitoring signals that La Niña may reemerge, potentially affecting weather patterns around the world. While the evidence is mounting, forecasters stress that the magnitude and local impacts remain uncertain.

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What Is La Niña — and Why It Matters

La Niña is one phase of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle. It is characterized by cooler-than-average ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific. When La Niña is active, it can shift global atmospheric patterns—altering precipitation, wind flows, storm tracks, and seasonal temperature behavior across many regions.

The opposite phase is El Niño, which warms those Pacific waters and tends to push warmer, drier conditions in many areas. In between, ENSO-neutral periods occur, when neither extreme dominates.

The Latest Forecasts: Signs Pointing Toward La Niña

According to climate forecasts, current ocean and atmospheric signals suggest a transition from ENSO-neutral toward La Niña conditions. Some models give more than a 70% probability that La Niña will develop in the October–December period. However, the forecast also notes that those chances diminish slightly deeper into winter.

Other international research groups echo this cautious outlook. Their forecast plume indicates a moderate probability of La Niña conditions developing by late fall and continuing into the December–February period.

Reports also suggest that La Niña is likely from September 2025 through January 2026, though the Pacific remains in a neutral state for now, with sea surface temperatures just slightly below average.

What the Potential 2025–26 La Niña Could Bring

While it remains too early to predict extremes, here’s a region-by-region look at possible impacts if La Niña does develop:

Region Possible Effects
North America Colder, snowier winters in northern U.S. and Canada; relatively milder, drier winters in the southern U.S.
South Asia & Himalayas Extended cold spells in northern India and Pakistan, with heavier snowfall in high-altitude zones.
Australia / Southeast Asia Elevated rainfall, tropical cyclone activity, and flood potential in vulnerable zones.
South America Drier conditions in Peru, Chile; wetter weather in parts of Brazil and Argentina.
Africa More complex: eastern Africa may see shifts in rainfall; southern Africa could face drought stress.

That said, calling it “the coldest winter in decades” would be premature. The overall outcome will depend on additional climate drivers such as the polar vortex, snow coverage in the Arctic, as well as other ocean/atmospheric interactions.

What Makes This Case Tricky

  • The forecast probabilities, while leaning toward La Niña, are not certain — especially deeper into winter.

  • Some models suggest that ENSO-neutral conditions remain possible, which could soften expected effects.

  • Even during a La Niña event, local weather outcomes may deviate from “typical” behavior due to other concurrent climate patterns.

How to Prepare

  • In colder regions: Be ready for more snow, colder outbreaks, and higher heating costs.

  • In flood-prone regions: Monitor hydrological forecasts, as La Niña may enhance rainfall in some zones.

  • For agriculture & infrastructure: Use forecast probabilities (not guarantees) to inform planting, water management, and resource allocation.

  • Stay informed: Climate agencies will update ENSO forecasts regularly through the season.


Bottom line:
The scientific consensus currently leans toward a weak to moderate La Niña emerging in the latter part of 2025 and lasting into early 2026. But conditions are not yet locked in. While many regions may experience cooler, wetter, or more volatile weather than in recent years, extremes can’t be predicted with certainty yet. This winter has the potential to be more dynamic than most — but whether it becomes record-breaking remains to be seen.

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