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  • Currently in Portland — June 27, 2023: Just a few clouds on this mostly sunny days. Temps will once again reach 80 degrees.

Currently in Portland — June 27, 2023: Just a few clouds on this mostly sunny days. Temps will once again reach 80 degrees.

Plus, new data show El Niño is rapidly strengthening.

The weather, currently.

Just a few clouds on this mostly sunny days. Temps will once again reach 80 degrees.

If you enjoyed Monday then you're in luck—Tuesday is almost an exact carbon copy of Monday's weather. We'll see a few clouds again but the temp will still reach around 80 degrees. We'll have a light breeze, but probably not enough to give you a chill until after dark. Speaking of after-dark—overnight temps will once again drop to the mid-50s. And if you sleep with the bedroom windows open you'll know that's enough to give a bit of a chill, especially if you soaked up any sunshine in the afternoon hours. Let's enjoy these lovely early summer days before it gets too darn hot!

What you can do, currently.

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What you need to know, currently.

El Niño is back, and it’s angry.

El Niño, the periodic warming of the tropical Pacific Ocean, is back — and it’s getting worse fast.

New data out Monday shows that El Niño has now officially moved into “moderate” territory — with tropical Pacific water temperatures already up to 1.0°C higher than normal. That’s expected to keep growing quickly over the next few months, with a worst-case estimate from Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology showing a peak warming of 3.2°C by November — which would be the strongest El Niño ever measured, by far. Even an average of global predictions now show a peak warming of 2.2°C — meaning that only the El Niños that began in 1982, 1997, and 2015 would be stronger.

The implications of an El Niño this strong are difficult to underestimate. In 2015-16, more than 60 million people worldwide experienced hunger due to drought made worse by the El Niño. The Great Barrier Reef in Australia suffered its worst coral bleaching event in history, with about 30% of the reef losing most of its corals. Pacific Islanders faced a string of the strongest tropical cyclones ever recorded.

Initial research shows that this year’s El Niño could cost the struggling global economy nearly $3 trillion.