Here’s the latest on the 2026 Super El Niño, based on recent climate briefings and reputable outlets.
- Status and forecast outlook:
- Several sources in April 2026 indicated a transition from La Niña to El Niño was likely in 2026, with growing expectations of a strong to potentially “super” El Niño by fall 2026. Different models show a range of timing and intensity, but a move toward El Niño conditions during mid to late 2026 was a common theme.[1][3][4][5][7][10]
- Potential impacts:
- If a Super El Niño develops, expected effects often include warmer global temperatures, altered rainfall and storm tracks, heavier rainfall and flood risk in some regions (notably the Americas and parts of Asia), and drought pressure in others. Winter 2026/27 could see pronounced anomalies depending on the exact intensity, with possible repercussions for agriculture, water resources, and energy demand.[4][7][9][10][1]
- Confidence and caveats:
- While multiple analyses point toward a strong event, ENSO predictions at this lead time carry uncertainties. Official forecasts typically tighten as more data become available in spring and early summer 2026, so conditions could still adjust in the coming weeks.[5][10]
Illustration example:
- Timeline sketch (spring to fall 2026): La Niña complete → neutral → El Niño likely by mid-late 2026 → possible peak intensity in winter 2026/27, potentially reaching a high-end El Niño depending on ocean-atmosphere coupling.
What this means for you in Los Angeles:
- Weather signals may shift toward wetter or drier patterns depending on the exact El Niño strength and storm tracks. A stronger El Niño can influence winter rain patterns and storm frequency, but local outcomes are still contingent on broader atmospheric conditions and regional climate variability.[10][1]
Would you like a concise daily/weekly brief with the latest official ENSO Diagnostic Discussion summaries and a calendar of likely impacts for your area? I can pull in the most current summaries and tailor it to Southern California. Citation: latest summaries and forecasts citing NOAA/NOAA-affiliated outlets are reflected in the sources noted above.[1][5][10]