El Niño may be over — what weather could Canadians ...
Watch El Niño may be over — what weather could Canadians see in the coming months? Video Online, on GlobalNews.ca
globalnews.caI don’t have live access to current news in this moment, but I can summarize what recent Canadian coverage has said about El Niño and its potential impacts.
Short answer
Context and likely channels
What to watch right now
Would you like me to pull the most current Canada-specific El Niño forecast and summarize the latest outlook from Environment and Climate Change Canada and a few major outlets? I can provide a concise, region-by-region snapshot with citations.
Watch El Niño may be over — what weather could Canadians see in the coming months? Video Online, on GlobalNews.ca
globalnews.caThe Australian Bureau of Meteorology says its monitoring shows the El Niño weather event is over. But scientists say its effects could still linger over Canada.
globalnews.caTake advantage of it, Canada: A stretch of above-seasonal temperatures will spread across much of the country next week
www.theweathernetwork.comEnvironment and Climate Change Canada’s scientists released the 2025–2026 winter seasonal forecast and launched the expanded Rapid Extreme Weather Event Attribution system to show how human-caused climate change affects extreme precipitation.
www.canada.caFor the first time in seven years, El Niño is here, setting the stage for a likely surge in global temperatures and more extreme weather, according to the United Nations’ weather agency.
www.ctvnews.caToday, Environment and Climate Change Canada presented its seasonal outlook for winter 2024–2025. Experts predict close to or above normal temperatures across the north and east. In the west, a warm start to the season is expected to be followed by normal to below normal temperatures.
www.canada.caThe global weather pattern El Niño has returned for the first time in seven years, according to the World Meteorological Organization, setting the stage for further extreme weather and soaring temperatures.
www.cbc.caGlobal News
globalnews.caEl Niño and La Niña drive seasonal weather patterns over Canada and across the world. Explore these high-impact events and how they affect weather here at home.
www.theweathernetwork.com