La Nina conditions are weakening and a shift to an El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) neutral weather pattern is expected to develop in April and persist through the Northern Hemisphere summer, a U.S. government weather forecaster said last week.
La Nina is a phenomenon which is part of the larger El Nino-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) climatic cycle involving water temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean.
While La Nina causes cooler-than-average temperatures, raising chances of both floods and droughts, thereby affecting crops, ENSO neutral means that the water temperature remains near the average level and crop yields may be more stable.
Earlier this week, Japan’s weather bureau said that conditions similar to the La Nina phenomenon are starting to weaken.
The bureau added that it estimates a 60 percent chance of normal weather patterns continuing towards the Northern Hemisphere summer.
“The forecast team concurs and predicts ENSO-neutral…with a 62 percent chance in June-August 2025…and chances greater than 50 percent through July-September 2025,” the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center (CPC) said in its monthly forecast.
“La Nina is over for now, as we are officially in a neutral status and sea surface anomalies in the central Pacific are right at zero. With that said, there will likely be dryness in the central and southern Plains for at least the next month or so, which will impact winter wheat growth,” said Donald Keeney, senior agricultural meteorologist at Maxar.
“Also, we do anticipate some dryness developing in central Brazil in May and June, which will stress safrinha corn. There will likely be continued drier conditions in eastern Europe, Ukraine, and western Russia through June, and will impact both winter wheat as well as early growth of corn and sunflowers,” Keeney added.
(Reporting by Brijesh Patel and Ishaan Arora in Bengaluru)