NASA satellites detect warm Pacific swell signaling possible El Niño

NASA and European partners have tracked a large pulse of warm water moving across the Pacific Ocean toward South America. The observation, captured by the Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite, raises the possibility that El Niño conditions could develop later this year.

Data from the satellite showed sea levels near Peru more than 5.9 inches above average by mid-May. This rise stems from Kelvin waves that carry warm water eastward after wind patterns shift in the western Pacific.

Josh Willis, a sea level researcher at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, noted the timing. "While this year's event started a bit later than the big El Niños of 2015 and 1997, it's beginning to catch up," he said. "We'll see how big it gets."

Nadya Vinogradova Shiffer, lead program scientist at NASA Headquarters, said the satellite helps track these waves to improve forecasts of weather extremes. El Niño events typically peak between November and January, with effects that can include heavy rain in some areas and drought in others.

A second satellite, Sentinel-6B, launched in November 2025 and is expected to take over monitoring duties by the end of 2026.

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Drought-stricken Andes landscape with forest fires and NOAA El Niño forecast map overlay, illustrating 90% probability warning.
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NOAA raises El Niño probability to 90% for September 2026

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The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) updated its forecasts, estimating a 90% probability of El Niño starting in September 2026 and lasting through the year's final quarter. It raised the May-July projection from 25% in March to 61%. Experts warn of impacts in regions like the Caribbean, Andes, and Orinoquía, including forest fire risks from water deficits and thermal stress.

Scientists forecast an 80 percent likelihood that an El Niño will form by September, with most models pointing to a moderate event. Some simulations indicate the possibility of a much stronger episode. Global warming is expected to intensify the effects of any such occurrence.

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Global weather agencies have declared that El Niño has started in the tropical Pacific. Models indicate a 63 per cent chance it will become a very strong or super El Niño.

The Ministry of Housing urged local authorities and service operators to prepare emergency measures ahead of the likely arrival of the El Niño phenomenon in the second half of the year.

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The Hong Kong Observatory said the developing El Nino could intensify four to seven tropical cyclones into super typhoons this year. It also forecast temperatures in the city could reach 35 degrees Celsius on Friday.

James Hansen, a prominent climate scientist at Columbia University, has predicted that 2026 will become the hottest year on record, surpassing 2024 due to accelerating global warming and an impending super El Niño. He argues that current sea surface temperatures support this forecast despite ongoing La Niña cooling. Other experts urge caution amid forecast uncertainties.

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The US National Science Foundation will largely remove mooring arrays from the Ocean Observatories Initiative following federal funding reductions. Scientists say the move will impair monitoring of El Niño events and the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation.

 

 

 

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