Latest News
12/31/2025, 8:29 am EST
Next week is trending warmer except GFS ENS which maintains a colder pattern. Forecast models are disagreeable for January 9-15 although majority of solutions are trending colder. The week-4 forecast is prohibitively cold according to CFS/ECM and AI. CFS/ECM trend toward a thaw by early February.
12/30/2025, 6:02 am EST
Never a shortage of dramatic weather events as 2025 comes to a close. A lingering negative phase of the Antarctic oscillation (-AAO) causes a mid-latitude trough east of Argentina that extends northwestward to soak Brazil into the New Year. Meanwhile, excessive rainfall across Northern Australia will continue. The arctic air source region across Western Canada during December is likely to dissipate in early January due to a cold stratosphere.
12/28/2025, 9:13 am EST
Excessive rainfall causes widespread flooding in North/West Queensland this week. Residual effects extend southward to South Australia. Heavy rain continues on the Northwest Coast. Heavy rains are likely to continue next week in the East.
12/26/2025, 8:16 am EST
Many weather hazards continue this holiday weekend. Ongoing flooding is widespread in California as the “atmospheric river” storm track begins to wind down. Heavy mountain snow continues for Northern California and Sierra Nevada Mountain Ranges. Snow advisories extend inland to the Rocky Mountains. Dense fog in the Midwest and Northern Gulf States, typical of unseasonably mild air. An ice storm rages in Western Pennsylvania and Winter Storm Warning for the northern Mid-Atlantic region today for heavy snow.
12/23/2025, 8:27 am EST
The negative phase North Atlantic oscillation forecast continues and inevitably drives colder changes in the East U.S. Helping to increase East U.S. cold risk is a southern and sustained shift of snow cover across the Northeast States.
Climate Impact Company Chart of the Day
Explaining the Extremely Wet Northern Australia DEC-25 Climate
Prohibitive rainfall was observed across Northern Australia during December 2025 including departures from normal >400 MM (~16 in.) in northwest Queensland. Conversely, despite La Nina climate, the East Coast was extremely dry. The heavy convection driving the wet climate across Northern Australia caused previously warm SSTA to cool significantly, especially off the East Coast where 30-day changes exceed 4C.
Climate Impact Company Climate Diagnostics
The Warming Oceans Increasingly Contributing to High Impact Weather/Climate in 2025
Globally, 2025 projects as the third warmest on record (DEC-25 data not yet available as of this writing). As of December 1st, the U.S. has observed the fifth warmest year in the 131-year period of record. A significant contributor to the warmer climate is the influence of increasing ocean temperature, most notable in the middle latitudes accelerated by the presence of marine heatwaves (MHW).







