The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) expects the El Niño climate phenomenon responsible for record-breaking global temperatures to end this year. In a press release on Monday, the WMO said there is a 70% probability that the La Niña weather event will emerge by November, as a result of cooler temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean. In many places, La Niña has the opposite climate impact to El Niño, the WMO said, although the effects of La Niña are much stronger in the tropics than in Europe. According to the current forecast, Central America, the Caribbean and …