BW
SCIENCE
Breaking Coverage

El Niño sparks record temperature fears

El Niño is back, and scientists warn it could drive global temperatures to unprecedented levels. The phenomenon, officially declared in 2023, disrupts weather patterns worldwide.

7 slides · Swipe for more
Read Full Story →
1
of 5

What is El Niño phenomenon?

El Niño is a natural climate pattern linked to periodic warming of sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean. It occurs every 2–7 years and affects global weather systems.

Read Full Story →
2
of 5

2023 El Niño could break records

After several La Niña years, El Niño's return in 2023 raises concerns. Experts warn this event might push Earth’s average temperature past the 1.5°C global warming threshold.

Read Full Story →
3
of 5

Impacts around the world

El Niño brings extremes: heavy rainfall in South America, drought in Australia, and heatwaves globally. These disruptions threaten agriculture, water supplies, and infrastructure.

Read Full Story →
4
of 5

Scientific predictions for El Niño 2023

Organizations like NASA and the World Meteorological Organization are monitoring El Niño closely. They predict a significant influence on weather systems and the planet's average temperature through 2024.

Read Full Story →
5
of 5

Urgent call for global preparedness

El Niño’s anticipated impacts highlight the need for preparation. Countries must bolster disaster response systems to manage floods, droughts, and heatwaves effectively.

Read Full Story →
BW
Full Story

The Full Picture

El Niño's return in 2023 could challenge global resilience amid a warming planet. Read the full analysis on BreakWire News to understand what lies ahead.

Swipe up to read on BreakWire News
Read Full Story →