Forecasters from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced Thursday that El Niño has officially formed, with conditions expected to intensify significantly by winter. This event could rank among the largest in over 70 years, according to lead meteorologist Ariel Cohen of NOAA's National Weather Service.
El Niño, a climate phenomenon occurring every two to seven years, is characterized by unusually warm ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific. Conditions developed over the past month, and forecasters now see a 63% chance of 'very strong' conditions, meaning tropical Pacific waters may warm more than 2 degrees Celsius between November and January.
This is a sharp increase from last month's 37% forecast and April's 25% estimate. While the odds favor wet conditions, Cohen cautioned that a significant El Niño does not guarantee wet weather.
Over the past half-century, only three 'very strong' El Niño events have occurred: in 1982-1983, 1997-1998, and 2015-16. The first two brought exceptionally wet conditions to California, but the 2015-16 event resulted in drier-than-normal conditions across several southwestern states.
For residents of Tuolumne County and the city of Confidence, this means preparing for potentially heavy rainfall and flooding, though the exact impacts remain uncertain. Local emergency services are monitoring the situation closely.