Feds Upgrade El Niño To Unusually Strong, But Is It A Drought Buster? Probably Not

WASHINGTON (CBS/AP) — Federal forecasters upgraded this year's El Niño to an unusual strong status, but said it's probably not a record breaker or drought buster.

Mike Halpert, deputy director of the federal Climate Prediction Center, said the current worldwide weather shifting event doesn't match the monster El Niño of 1997-1998, nor is it likely to.

With even warmer waters in the central Pacific in August, the hottest in more than 17 years, the prediction center moved the El Niño up from moderate status. So far the El Niño is the third strongest on record, behind 1997-98 and a weird one in 1987-88 that peaked early.

VIDEO: Warm El Niño Waters Lead To Rare Crab Swarm Near Channel Islands

Meteorologists said strong El Niños usually dump heavy rains on southern California, but its four-year water deficit is too big to be erased in one wet winter.

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