Home / Editor's Pick /

El Niño to return? Auckland floods linked to La Niña

06:00
1 February 2023

El Niño to return?
Auckland floods linked to La Niña

auckland floods© picture alliance

After three years of experiencing the La Niña weather phenomenon, El Niño is expected to return in 2023, but not without bringing new dangers.

The recent, severe floods in Auckland, New Zealand were said to be exacerbated by La Niña, which causes the North Island to receive more rainfall than normal, due to the directional shift of prevalent winds. Different impacts are expected in different areas.

Both La Niña and El Niño are two sides of the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) which impacts water temperatures in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. La Niña brings cooler waters while El Niño brings warmer waters.

El Niño is known to intensify severe weather events across much of the planet and causes large swings year-to-year in weather differences.

In addition to influencing weather, both sides of the ENSO coin impact the global climate. La Niña helps cool temperatures. Despite this, 2022 still became one of the hottest years on record.

The potential arrival of El Niño means more heat records are likely to be breached in 2023, and since it intensifies later into the year, 2024 too.

Its impact varies in different regions. In western Pacific areas such as Australia conditions become drier, and hotter. A stark change after years of severe flooding due to intense rainfall.

In Europe the impact of El Niño arriving is not as severe although Spain and Portugal can often see wetter, and warmer winters. Particularly strong events also impact the UK and Ireland similarly.

There is currently a 66% of El Niño forming by August according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Not all El Niño events are the same in scale, it is still to early to predict how severe any potential event this year would be.

Ryan Hathaway
More on the topic
Weather map showing forecast temperatures for England and Wales on Wednesday 17 September and Friday 19 September. On Wednesday, most areas range between 17°C and 21°C, while by Friday temperatures rise, with London and Norwich reaching 24°C and many regions showing 21°C. The colour shading shifts from lighter to darker orange, indicating a general warming trend.
Wednesday 17 September 2025

Warm end to the week

Late summer interlude
Thursday 25 September 2025

Cloudy week

Understanding clouds on the WeatherRadar
WindRadar shows wind speeds exceeding 150 kilometres per hour on the coast of China
Wednesday 24 September 2025

Damage and fatalities

Typhoon RAGASA rages in Southeast Asia
All weather news
This might also interest you
Split weather map showing the UK and Ireland. The left side illustrates strong winds circulating around a low-pressure system, with gusts of 20–30 mph highlighted in orange and yellow. The right side shows radar imagery with widespread blue rain bands and patches of thunderstorms, especially over northern England and Scotland.
Thursday 28 August 2025

Breakfast brief

Remaining widely unsettled
Wednesday 27 August 2025

Breakfast brief

Frontal system brings heavy rain
Weather map showing a split in north-south conditions of the UK. Scotland sees widespread cloud cover while England and Wales have clear skies.
Friday 15 August 2025

Clouds on the move

North-south split in conditions
All articles
Weather & Radar

www.weatherandradar.ie

facebooktwitteryouTubeContact uslinkList
Privacy Policy | Legal info | Accessibility statement