SUPER El Nińo 2023 - It's Getting Really Bad...

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I've been hearing reports of a "Super" El Niño, and that it's officially here. But I'll be the first to admit, I had no idea what el niño and la niña even were. And in the course of my research, I have figured out so much, and it's pretty epic stuff. So let's figure out what the World has in store for it for the Summer of 2023, and going into 2024. What even makes it "Super?" Let's find out together!

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Chapters
0:00 - Introduction
0:58 - ENSO System
2:00 - Last Cycle
3:10 - The Power of the Pacific
4:00 - Impacts
5:20 - What makes El Niño
7:00 - Impact on the US
8:00 - Super El Niño
9:20 - Severe Weather
11:40 - What Can You Do?

Hashtags
#LIVEINPOWER #Anker #AnkerSOLIX

what we'll cover
two bit da vinci,el nino,el nino 2023,la nina,extreme weather,weather channel,hurricane season,hurricane season 2023,major hurricane,winter storm,atlantic hurricane season 2023,summer outlook 2023,summer forecast,how el nino and la nina affect weather,el nino weather pattern,el nino la nina explained,what is el nino,will a super el nino develop in 2023?,el nino update,el nino and la nina explained,SUPER El Niño 2023 is Going to be a Beast!, El Niño 2023 is Going to be a INSANE!, 2023 SUPER El Nińo Is HERE - What You NEED To Know!, SUPER El Nińo 2023 - It's Getting really bad,
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It's been weird in Colorado. We had the wettest June in decades. It is after the 4th of July, and still have not turned on the sprinkler system. Just saw on the news, the entire state is out of drought conditions, when the entire state was in severe drought just last year. The heavy rains started in May. Unfortunately, those rains did overwhelm our old sump pump and our basement was flooded. Note to self, get the sump pump replaced every 7-10 years, not 20 years, and keep an eye on it. Thanks for the info. Been a lot of good stuff. Thanks for breaking it down into easy to understand learning!

goggutube
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It's wild how these weather patterns impact every area so differently. The last few years (during the la Nina) the winters in my area (Maryland) have been extremely mild. Very little snow, hardly any icy conditions and other than an occasional arctic blast, quite pleasant. Historically, after an el Nino summer, we often have winters with record snowfall - so I am going to try to prepare for that to come!

WayneTheBoatGuy
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California actually gets more precipitation during an El Niño event. This sometimes impacts our snow pack due to the warmer temperatures and higher elevation Rain. But the jetstream dips further south during El Niño and causes pineapple express events bringing precipitation from the tropics. La Niña brings drought to California.

SoCalTropicalgardener
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I live in Dallas, TX. And this summer has been amazing! There is plenty of rainy days and very mild hot days. Best weather I 3yrs.

daxxab
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living next to the Pacific (maybe 250 yards, native So. Californian) recall the 1997 El Nino and was 50 that year, warmer water and great surfing!!!! Can't wait!

kesslermontijo
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The weather is definitely different this year. Here in Montana, we have had at least 10-15x the normal rain in the last two months. Usually we will get about an inch or two. Each rain storm we have had, has been 2-3 inches each storm with flooding events being very frequent. It has also been a lot cooler this year. Normally it's in the high 80's, and it has barely made it past 80 so far. We are the ones that typically get fires this time of year, but they are happening to our neighbors to the north this year. I just hope it isn't like last summer, where it was hovering around 100 for over a month straight(almost 2). That was a brutal summer.

squishy
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As a resident of Rural Marathwada, a draught prone area in south India, this is a start of a horror movie.

2016 we were hit bad, this seems lot worse.
It's almost July and no Signs of Arrival of monsoon yet.

alanwatts
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You have become my new go to channel for interesting facts, love the structure you got.

One engineer to another

MrLaafish
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Sothis has began in 2022? I'm in Mexico and last yearfrom an average rainy season of 90 days, only 8 days of rain we had, this year has been hotter but at least the rainy season started in May instead of June by all the month of June, not one, single day of rain, excepting the 30th, I sure hope and pray we get more rain, last year's drought severely affected our grapefruit tree, usually each spring it fills with blossoms, this year was the exception. Thanks for sharing Da Vinci, 👍and greetings👋from central Mexico.

qualqui
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The biggest wildfire in recorded US history is the 1825 Miramichi Fire. It blazed through an estimated 3, 000, 000 million acres and claimed at least 160 lives. That makes it not just one of the most widespread fires, but also one of the deadliest.

TheLazyLiberal
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I live in Romania, east europe. I can confirm that i don't remember ever having less than 25 C during the days in end of iune. And we are having rain almost daily. This severly diminished the tast of my fruits in the garden, and greatly contributed to the fruits rotting on the tree. This year's super el ninio is granted.

kjdtm
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Thanks for this video. It's already been hotter here than usual. We had no spring. We went from cold to hot within a week. Unfortunately I have end stage copd and can't breathe when the air is warm or hot, have to keep the AC pretty low. Do keep the heat low in winter too. My poor hubby wears a sweat shirt in the house year round just so I can breathe. We were going to put solar panels on years ago. The neighbors across the street had them and were getting rebates from the light company. However, we live in an area where we get alot of thunderstorms and the first hail storm we had after they put theirs on was a doozy. They did get the roof and panels replaced by their insurance company and then dropped. When they finally found new homeowners insurance it cost them 4 times what they were paying before. That changed our minds about solar panels. We just invested in a generator that would handle the things that have to be on in case of a power outage.

Shari
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I would really love if these videos focused just a little bit on the rest of the world too and what effect el niño has on the rest of the world. Don’t get me wrong this was a great video. Here in Sweden the summer has been increadibly hot so far and there has been very little rain, we’ve had two weeks now with around 25-27 degrees celsius and I live quite a bit up north by the coast where this sort of heat usually only occurs a couple times a year. I would really like a deep dive on the golf-stream for example and how it is affected by climate change and how the nordics could end up under ice again if it is disrupted.
I’m sorry for any spelling mistakes, my autocorrect is in swedish.

elinkarlsson
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I just watched this watching your video on the recent fires and ongoing devastation in Hawaii. Talk about a deja vu. Shudder. My heart so goes out to the Hawaiian people. But also to the others who've had terrible fires this year, eg, here in Canada, and others. Then there have been so many floods, and just the past couple of days landslides in India. I'm nearly 70 years old and i definitely notice changes in weather, etc. It's definitely warmer in the winters here in Ontario, Canada, than it used to be, for the most part. Summers...not sure. It seems hotter sometimes, sometimes less so. I think we're getting more cloud cover now than we used to, even before our fires in 2023. Thank you for all the info you pull together and altho it's fast, I can follow it. Really appreciate it. (am typing with broken arm, so excuse any errors.

dianaholvik
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Everybody's been hollering "EL NIÑO IS HERE" but here in Malaysia it has been cold and very wet since 2 years ago. No dry season at all, let alone El Niño.

Seems as if we've been stuck in the monsoon season for years...

kkhalifah
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We normally keep a close eye on it here in Australia, the Pacific water is heating up a lot but the Indian Ocean Dipole is still in a neutral phase currently. If that were to remain neutral it can temper the impact of an El Nino. The presence of strong rainfall and cyclones a possible release valve for some additional heat exiting the system. During the most extreme El Nino events we usually have weak monsoon season and low cyclone activity.

vimzim
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Decreases hurricanes, but increases tornadoes. For the states, it increase precipitation which impacts heat for the west and south. This means that less ice falls in west, which equals to less running water to drink, shower, and irrigation for people in California for example. South like Texas experiences more rain with extreme precipitation, which equals to more tropical and severe storms. At least thats what I understand

JesusRodriguez-fobr
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2016 flooding in Louisiana cannot be considered without factoring in that it was a manmade flood event. Barriers on Interstate 12 were in place without drainage, causing them to dam up all of the rain watershed. I was there.

Philipsimojo
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I have lived in Los Angeles for all of my 60 years here on Earth. Last year at this time, we were experiencing record breaking heat waves and then in the winter we had record breaking rain storms! It was absurd and very unusual. This summer has been very different already. Mild temperatures and nothing really above the high 80s as of today. I welcome the cool temperatures down here in LA and hope it continues! 😎 🌞

lauragarciaros
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I’m in Michigan …I will attest to a much wetter spring than usual….I am grateful …2022 gave us 2 droughts in a row..end of Summer and middle Fall…mushroom season was 👎🏼……🌸☀️🌎💙

missshroom