El Nino predicted to return this year with implications for weather and fisheries
A warming of the central Pacific Ocean this year will change weather worldwide, US forecasters predict.
The warming, called an El Nino, can mean an even hotter year coming up and billions of dollars in losses for food crops.
Australia and South Africa should be dry while parts of South America become dry and parts become wet in an El Nino. Peru suffers the most, getting floods and poorer fishing.
But it could bring good news for some parts of the planet, leading to fewer Atlantic hurricanes and more rain next winter for drought-stricken California and southern US states. It could also bring and a milder winter for the frigid US north next year, meteorologists say
The National Oceanic Atmospheric and Administration issued an official El Nino watch today. An El Nino is a warming of the central Pacific once every few years, from a combination of wind and waves in the tropics. It shakes up climate around the world, changing rain and temperature patterns.
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