Conditions resembling La Niña developed in December 2008, but they are
already weakening and are not expected to herald a prolonged basin-wide
La Niña event. Indeed, most assessments indicate that a transition back to
neutral conditions is expected to occur over the next couple of months. One
interpretation is that this has been a brief redevelopment of the La Niña event
that prevailed through the latter part of 2007 and into the first half of 2008.
Nonetheless, the La Niña-like conditions are having significant consequences
for some current climate patterns, and impacts may continue in some regions
over the next month or two. By March-May 2009, forecasts suggest that the
most likely outcome is near-neutral conditions basin-wide across the tropical
Pacific. The likelihood of El Niño or La Niña development through the
remainder of 2009 is considered to be essentially unpredictable at this stage,
with neither event considered more likely than the other.