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FOX8 Meteorologist Charles Ewing Makes His 2025-26 Winter Weather Predictions!
NOAA projects a weak La Niña will drive U.S. winter weather with warmer southern states, wetter northern Rockies, and colder Pacific Northwest through early 2026.
- On Nov. 13, NOAA's Climate Prediction Center said a weak La Niña will be the primary driver of U.S. winter weather, with La Niña favored to persist through winter.
- Scientists describe La Niña as cooler-than-average equatorial Pacific water and ocean-atmosphere coupling that shifts jet-stream patterns.
- CPC predicts above-normal winter temperatures across the southern tier, California, and East Coast and Florida, with wetter conditions in the northern Rockies and Great Lakes and colder weather in the Pacific Northwest and upper Midwest.
- A La Niña Advisory is still in effect because conditions were observed over the past month, and the Climate Prediction Center's forecast covers meteorological winter.
- Although La Niña tends to influence winter weather, AccuWeather's Paul Pastelok explained, `These waters off the West Coast and extending farther out are very, very important going into our forecast this year`, with a northern Pacific marine heat wave adding uncertainty and the Atlantic hurricane season being essentially over.
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The National Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported on the continuation of conditions in La Niña in the last month. This phase of the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle is expected to persist for the rest of the year.
FOX8 Meteorologist Charles Ewing makes his 2025-26 winter weather predictions!
(WGHP) — FOX8 Meteorologist Charles Ewing is up next to make his prediction for this year's winter weather. According to Charles, a weak La Niña should develop this winter. Typically, a La Niña involves the water of the Pacific Ocean warming off the coast of South America, bringing the Piedmont a warm and dry winter. Here [...]
·Cleveland, United States
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Total News Sources14
Leaning Left1Leaning Right1Center5Last UpdatedBias Distribution72% Center
Bias Distribution
- 72% of the sources are Center
72% Center
14%
C 72%
14%
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