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A potentially significant El Niño is taking shape in the Pacific Ocean, with forecasters saying there’s a 61 percent chance the climate pattern will develop between May and July, according to the National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center.

The latest outlook also shows a 25% probability that the system could grow into a “very strong” event, raising concerns among meteorologists watching the rapidly shifting ocean-atmosphere conditions.


  The Golden Gate Bridge on a rainy day. AP The Golden Gate Bridge on a rainy day. AP

The update comes just after La Niña, which dominated the most recent winter, officially ended, clearing the way for a transition in the tropical Pacific tied to the broader climate cycle known as El Niño-Southern Oscillation.

The pattern alternates between its warm phase, El Niño, and its cooler counterpart, La Niña, with neutral periods in between.

El Niño conditions develop when weakened trade winds allow unusually warm water to build across the central and eastern tropical Pacific.

The shift can influence weather patterns worldwide, including rainfall and storm tracks in California, though outcomes vary widely from one event to another.


  Downtown Los Angeles. chones – stock.adobe.com Downtown Los Angeles. chones – stock.adobe.com

Scientists caution that while El Niño often tilts the odds toward wetter winters in SoCal, history shows the pattern is far from predictable. The infamous 2015–2016 “Godzilla” El Niño, one of the strongest on record, failed to deliver expected rainfall in the region.

Since 1950, there have been only five strong El Niños and five very strong ones, according to researchers tracking ocean temperature anomalies.


  Drivers during a powerful storm. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Drivers during a powerful storm. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

“This potential developing event has more access to warm water than any of those past events had and has also achieved more westerly wind forcing in the western Pacific than any of those previous events,” Paul Roundy, an atmospheric scientist, told the SFGate.

Still, he cautioned it is too early to lock in expectations for next winter.


  The Hollywood sign in Griffith Park. David Buchan for California Post The Hollywood sign in Griffith Park. David Buchan for California Post

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