Asymmetric upside on rice + soy
Rice supply inelastic; India ban risk = step-function spike. Soy: NE Brazil + US delayed planting = limited buffer if Argentina also dry. Wheat less exposed (Russia + EU buffer).
A first-principles tour of the 2026 El Nino - its mechanics, dynamics, and the cascading impacts on food, energy, and supply chains. Compare it directly with 1982-83, 1997-98, and 2015-16.
“The Pacific Ocean is acting like a giant battery. Trade winds pile warm water west - that water stores energy. When winds slacken, the battery releases east. Roughly 11 million terawatt-hours of heat sloshing around - enough to bend the jet stream, fail monsoons, dry Australia, drown the Andes, and break Indian agriculture.”
Every value here is observed public data from NOAA's Physical Sciences Laboratory — no forecasts, no invented numbers. Events are derived from the Oceanic Niño Index using the official CPC rule (≥5 consecutive 3-month seasons at ±0.5°C).
| Event ▾ | Type | Strength | Peak | Months |
|---|
Live current conditions from Open-Meteo across 8 key ENSO-impacted regions, plus active disaster events from NASA EONET. Refreshes on load.
Official warnings from every national meteorological service worldwide.
India Meteorological Dept · monsoon, daily bulletins, cyclone tracking.
Australian BOM · bushfire, drought, ENSO tracker.
US severe weather, drought monitor, atmospheric rivers.
Tropical Tidbits / NOAA PMEL / CPC-style live diagnostics. Eight ENSO indices monitored against the 1991-2020 climatology. Anomalies sustained >+0.5°C in Nino 3.4 = El Nino; >+1.5°C = strong; >+2.0°C = super.
Upper 300m heat anomaly across 5N-5S Pacific. Positive = warm subsurface reservoir feeding eastward Kelvin waves. Charges 2-4 months ahead of surface peak.
Eastward-propagating Kelvin pulses deliver warm water to eastern Pacific in ~2 months. Currently tracking 2 active downwelling pulses in the central Pacific.
Equatorial Pacific is in full East-Pacific super-El-Nino signature: warm pool extended to dateline, trade winds collapsed, deep convection over central Pacific, suppressed convection over Indonesia.
Subsurface warm pool + active Kelvin pulses imply Nino 3.4 still rising into JJA 2026. Cross-equatorial winds & Indian Ocean Dipole both supportive. Probability of peak >+2.0°C: ~65%.
Spring predictability barrier passed but model spread remains. A single MJO event could disrupt timing. Watch for upwelling Kelvin pulses or trade-wind reversal — either would moderate peak.
USDM-style intensity scale D0-D4. Synthesized from US Drought Monitor, Drought.gov, EU JRC EDO, India IMD, Australia BOM, FAO ASIS, CHIRPS satellite precip. Updated weekly.
| Region | Class | Land area | Pop. affected | Crop area | Days dry | 30-d precip anom | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Central India · Maharashtra/MP/Karnataka | D3 | 62% | 340M | 28 Mha | 47d | -58% | Worsening |
| NE Brazil · MATOPIBA · Cerrado | D3 | 71% | 28M | 14 Mha | 63d | -72% | Worsening |
| SE Australia · NSW/VIC wheat belt | D2 | 54% | 8M | 11 Mha | 52d | -48% | Worsening |
| Indonesia · Sumatra/Kalimantan | D2 | 38% | 120M | 9 Mha palm | 41d | -44% | Watch fires |
| Southern Africa · ZA/ZW/MZ | D4 | 81% | 55M | 7 Mha | 88d | -79% | Exceptional |
| Mekong · TH/LA/VN delta | D2 | 42% | 65M | 4 Mha rice | 35d | -32% | Worsening |
| SW USA · AZ/NM/TX | D3 | 68% | 35M | 2 Mha | 71d | -61% | Heat-dome ON |
| Central America · Dry Corridor | D2 | 59% | 12M | 1.6 Mha | 44d | -38% | Migration risk |
| S. Argentina · Pampas wheat/soy | D1 | 28% | 6M | 5 Mha | 22d | -18% | Watch |
| N. China Plain · HB/SD/HN | D1 | 31% | 200M | 8 Mha | 26d | -22% | Stable |
Crop area = farmable area inside the D2+ zone. Days dry = consecutive days < 1mm precipitation in lead agricultural districts. Sources: USDM, NOAA NCEI, FAO ASIS, GEOGLAM Crop Monitor.
Projected peak would exceed 2015-16 by ~30% in land area, driven by compounding ocean-heat baseline and SE Asia palm/peat zone.
How a thermocline tilt becomes a price spike. Commodity sensitivity, country exposure, and a global visual atlas.
Twelve commodities scored for ENSO sensitivity (1-5), with main producing regions, current price (World Bank Pink Sheet / CME / ICE settlements), YTD move, scenario direction, and historical analog precedent.
| Commodity | Top producers | ENSO sens. | Spot (May 26) | YTD | Scenario El Nino | 1997-98 | 2015-16 | 2026 outlook |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rice · long-grain | India, TH, VN, PK | 5/5 | $622/t | +14% | Bullish | +12% | +18% | +20 to +40% |
| Wheat · HRW | RU, EU, US, CN, IN, AU | 3/5 | $268/t | +7% | Mod. bullish | +9% | +11% | +8 to +15% |
| Corn · yellow #2 | US, CN, BR, AR, UA | 2/5 | $189/t | -2% | Mixed | +4% | +5% | -2 to +6% |
| Soybean | BR, US, AR, CN, IN | 4/5 | $485/t | +9% | Bullish NE BR risk | +8% | +14% | +10 to +18% |
| Palm oil | ID, MY, TH, CO | 5/5 | $1,180/t | +22% | Strong bullish | +45% | +38% | +35 to +55% |
| Sugar · raw | BR, IN, TH, CN, AU | 4/5 | 23.4 c/lb | +11% | Bullish (TH+IN risk) | +13% | +22% | +15 to +28% |
| Coffee arabica | BR, VN, CO, ID, ET | 5/5 | $3.80/lb | +34% | Strong bullish | +24% | +42% | +30 to +60% |
| Cocoa | CI, GH, EC, ID, NG | 3/5 | $8,200/t | +12% | Bullish (W. Africa dry) | +18% | +9% | +12 to +25% |
| Cotton | CN, IN, US, BR, PK | 3/5 | 82 c/lb | +4% | Mixed | +3% | -1% | +2 to +10% |
| Nat gas · Henry Hub | US, RU, IR, QA | 2/5 | $3.85/MMBtu | +18% | Bullish (cooling load) | +12% | -8% | +10 to +30% |
| Copper | CL, PE, CN, US, CD | 2/5 | $4.60/lb | +8% | Mod. bullish (CL/PE rain) | +6% | -12% | +0 to +12% |
| Urea · fertilizer | RU, CN, MA, US, IN | 2/5 | $425/t | +28% | Bullish (Hormuz overlay) | +8% | +11% | +25 to +50% |
ENSO sensitivity: 5 = direct first-order exposure (e.g. rice depends on Asian monsoon); 1 = minimal direct effect. Spot = mid-May 2026 reference. Scenario bands assume strong El Nino with Hormuz fertilizer overlay; collapse to neutral cuts ranges by ~50%.
Rice supply inelastic; India ban risk = step-function spike. Soy: NE Brazil + US delayed planting = limited buffer if Argentina also dry. Wheat less exposed (Russia + EU buffer).
SE Asia palm dryness + peat-fire risk; Brazil arabica + Indian sugar both ENSO-tilted. Cocoa already pricing W. Africa dryness; further upside if Harmattan worsens.
Heat-dome cooling demand + hydro-deficit in Mekong/Andes = nat-gas burn higher. ERCOT spot $1k/MWh days likely. India coal stocks at risk < 5 days.
Hormuz transit risk + Russia-Belarus potash flows = input cost compounds yield hit. Watch FOB Black Sea + Middle East urea futures.
18 economies scored across agriculture share of GDP, food import dependence, food share of CPI basket (inflation transmission), and overall ENSO-shock risk. Public data: World Bank, IMF WEO, FAO, USDA FAS, national stats.
| Country | Ag % GDP | Ag % employ. | Food imports % | Food in CPI | FX risk | Fiscal headroom | Stability risk | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | 17% | 42% | 8% | 46% | Medium | Tight | Medium-high | Very High |
| Indonesia | 13% | 28% | 11% | 28% | Medium | Tight | Medium | High |
| Vietnam | 12% | 36% | 9% | 36% | Low-med | Moderate | Low-med | High |
| Thailand | 9% | 31% | 7% | 33% | Low | Moderate | Low | High |
| Pakistan | 23% | 37% | 14% | 38% | High | Strained | High | Very High |
| Bangladesh | 12% | 38% | 15% | 39% | Medium | Tight | Medium | High |
| Philippines | 10% | 23% | 22% | 37% | Medium | Moderate | Low-med | High |
| Brazil | 7% | 9% | 6% | 20% | High (BRL) | Strained | Low-med | High |
| Argentina | 11% | 10% | 3% | 27% | Very high | Strained | Medium | High |
| Peru | 7% | 27% | 11% | 26% | Medium | Tight | Medium | High |
| Mexico | 4% | 12% | 15% | 28% | Low | Moderate | Low | Medium |
| Australia | 2% | 3% | 4% | 14% | Low | Strong | Very low | Medium |
| USA | 1% | 2% | 6% | 14% | Very low | Strong | Very low | Low |
| China | 7% | 22% | 8% | 29% | Low | Moderate | Low | Medium |
| Egypt | 11% | 21% | 30% | 35% | High | Strained | High | Very High |
| Kenya | 22% | 54% | 12% | 38% | Medium | Strained | Medium | High |
| Ethiopia | 36% | 66% | 11% | 54% | High | Strained | High | Very High |
| Nigeria | 23% | 35% | 9% | 52% | High | Strained | Medium | Very High |
Food in CPI = food & non-alcoholic beverages share of national consumer price index basket. Higher = a 10% food shock transmits more to headline inflation and central-bank reaction. Sources: World Bank WDI, IMF WEO Apr 2026, USDA FAS GAIN.
High ag-GDP, high food-CPI weight, weak fiscal headroom. A 20% food shock = 4-7 pts headline CPI = central-bank tightening + subsidy bill spike + civil-unrest probability.
Material exposure but more buffer: stronger FX reserves, deeper ag insurance, or producer-side benefit offsetting consumer pain. BRL/ARS watch.
Diversified economies, deep capital markets, robust supply chains. Real impact via inflation pass-through (USA grocery) and grid stress (ERCOT) but not balance-of-payments crises.
A global view in the spirit of Our World in Data: every chart titled, labeled, sourced. Hover for detail. Each tells one part of the same story — who bears the climate shock and how it transmits to food, prices, and people.
A composite 0-100 score combining agriculture's share of GDP, food import dependence, food weight in the consumer price basket, fiscal headroom, and historical drought sensitivity. Higher = more exposed to an El Niño shock.
X axis: share of food & beverages in the national CPI basket. Y axis: food import dependence (% of supply imported). Bubble area: population. Upper-right = most exposed to imported-food inflation. Color: 2026 composite vulnerability tier.
Sum of global D2 (severe), D3 (extreme), and D4 (exceptional) drought area in millions of square kilometers. 2015-16 and 2026 spikes reflect El Niño-driven expansion of dry zones across SE Asia, the Horn of Africa, NE Brazil and southern Africa.
Each panel shows price (USD, indexed to 100 at start of 1997) for one commodity from 1997 through May 2026. Light grey vertical bands mark El Niño events (1997-98, 2015-16, 2026 forming). The link between dry tropical seasons and food prices is visible across all four.
All data is open and verifiable. Where 2026 values are projections (drought area, prices Q3+), they reflect the 60% base-case scenario from Layer 6. Composite vulnerability weights: 30% ag-GDP, 25% food-CPI weight, 20% food import dependence, 15% historical drought sensitivity, 10% fiscal headroom (inverse). All charts reproducible from the Export Full Dataset button.
Five super El Niños in the satellite era, the historical ONI overlay, the Walker circulation, and the Bjerknes loop that drives all of it.
For each major event since 1982 we trace four states: the baseline twelve months before, the peak observation, the political-economic-social shock transmission, and the recovery twelve to twenty-four months after. The pattern repeats. The magnitudes vary.
Estimated direct damages in USD billions (current dollars) and attributable deaths globally. 2026 figures are base-case scenario projections.
Apr 1982 - Jul 1983 · Nino 3.4 peak +2.2°C Nov 1982 · Duration 15 months
No ENSO forecasting system existed in 1982. The event was diagnosed only after Peruvian fishermen reported empty nets. Causality: trade-wind collapse → warm-pool migration east → upwelling shutdown → fishery collapse → FX crisis. The 1982-83 event launched modern ENSO science (TAO buoy network commissioned 1985).
Apr 1997 - May 1998 · Nino 3.4 peak +2.4°C Nov-Dec 1997 · Duration 14 months
First event predicted in advance — NOAA flagged it in May 1997. Indonesia's peat-fire CO&sub2; release alone exceeded a year of EU emissions. Causality: Indonesia drying + El Niño slash-burn season + plantation expansion = unprecedented peat ignition. Carbon released took ~7 years to be re-absorbed by regrowth. The event made “atmospheric river” a household phrase in California.
Mar 2015 - May 2016 · Nino 3.4 peak +2.6°C Nov 2015 · Duration 15 months
Despite advance warning, social-system rigidity meant similar magnitudes of harm to 1997. Causality: two consecutive sub-100% Indian monsoons (2014-15 + 2015-16) drained rural savings before the El Niño hit, multiplying distress. GBR mortality is irreversible on decadal time horizons. Forecast quality >> resilience capacity in determining outcomes.
Jun 2023 - May 2024 · Nino 3.4 peak +2.0°C Nov-Dec 2023 · Duration 12 months
A “moderate” El Niño produced disproportionate impact because it landed on a record-warm baseline ocean. Causality: the temperature anomaly is what matters — but the absolute SST drives biology + atmosphere. Panama Canal restrictions reshaped global shipping. The 5th global mass bleaching began. Rice export bans transmitted to Asian retail in weeks. This event proved the “higher baseline” thesis for 2026.
May 2026 - est. Mar 2027 · Nino 3.4 May +1.8°C · Forecast peak +2.0 to +2.4°C
Unique features: (a) record-warm baseline means the absolute SST in central Pacific exceeds anything in instrumental record, amplifying convective response. (b) Hormuz fertilizer overlay compounds Indian shock unlike any prior event. (c) Just-in-time global supply chains have shorter buffers than 2015. (d) Climate-adapted breeding partially offsets long-term losses for the first time. Expect 1997-style transmission speed at 2015-style magnitudes, with concentrated exposure in food-import-dependent emerging markets.
Direct comparison of the eleven significant ENSO events of the satellite era. Some intensity values are reconstructed for pre-1979 events.
| Event | Peak ONI | Duration | Type | Damages | Deaths | FAO FPI peak Δ | Key signature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1972-73 | +2.1°C | 13 mo | EP Strong | $0.5B | ~1,000 | +30% | USSR-US wheat deal triggered |
| 1982-83 | +2.2°C | 15 mo | EP Super | $8-13B | ~2,000 | +8% | Peru anchovy collapse |
| 1986-87 | +1.4°C | 11 mo | EP Mod | ~$2B | ~500 | +3% | African drought intensification |
| 1991-92 | +1.8°C | 14 mo | EP Strong | ~$5B | ~3,500 | +9% | Southern Africa famine |
| 1997-98 | +2.4°C | 14 mo | EP Super | $35-45B | ~23,000 | +11% | Indo. peat fires, CA AR |
| 2002-03 | +1.3°C | 10 mo | CP Mod | ~$3B | ~1,200 | +5% | First "Modoki" recognized |
| 2009-10 | +1.6°C | 10 mo | CP Mod | ~$4B | ~2,000 | +14% | RU wheat ban → Arab Spring trigger |
| 2015-16 | +2.6°C | 15 mo | EP Super | ~$5B | ~10,000 | +13% | GBR mortality, Indo. fires |
| 2018-19 | +0.9°C | 9 mo | CP Weak | ~$2B | ~500 | +2% | Compound w/ trade war |
| 2023-24 | +2.0°C | 12 mo | EP Strong | ~$25B | ~4,000 | +8% | Panama Canal closure, India rice ban |
| 2026-27 | +2.0 to +2.4°C* | ~10 mo* | EP Strong-Super* | $15-45B* | 3-15k* | +18 to +25%* | Record-warm baseline + Hormuz compound |
* 2026-27 figures are base-case scenario projections from Forecast layer. Pre-1979 ONI values reconstructed from ERSSTv5.
Strip El Nino to its irreducible parts - wind, water, heat, feedback - then layer in Friedberg's framing.
All-In Podcast verbatim
"Think of the Pacific as a battery. The trade winds are the charger. They blow warm tropical water westward, piling it into the Indonesian warm pool - 4-6m higher and 3-4°C warmer than the eastern Pacific."
"That stored heat is enormous - 11 million terawatt-hours. Roughly 60x annual human energy use, as heat."
"When trade winds slack off - every 2 to 7 years - the battery discharges east. Kelvin waves race across the Pacific. Convection cells flip. Indonesia dries. Peru drowns. India's monsoon stalls."
"Because the atmosphere is one connected system, the heat dump bends jet streams. California gets atmospheric rivers. Texas gets ice storms. The whole planet feels the discharge."
"This is straight-up Bjerknes feedback - 1969 physics. The novel part for 2026: we're entering on top of an already record-warm ocean. The battery starts at a higher voltage."
Oceans store 1,000x more heat per cubic meter than air. Move 1°C of Pacific - the atmosphere convulses.
Bjerknes feedback: warmer east weakens trades, which warms east more. The battery discharges itself.
Rising air = rain. Shift the warm pool east, the rain follows. Indonesia loses its monsoon. Peru gets one.
Tropical heating bends extratropical winds. That's why Indonesia drives Texas ice storms and CA floods.
Real ONI data (NOAA CPC). Toggle events to overlay. Read side-by-side impacts.
Ocean heat content in 2025-26 is record-high. El Nino fires on top of an already-hot ocean.
India: ~92% LPA monsoon + Hormuz-route urea/potash risk. 1997 didn't have this.
Globalized JIT logistics transmit a Brazilian or Australian shock to shelves in weeks.
Mental models that make El Nino intuitive: feedback, leverage points, product life-cycle thinking.
Reverse the loop → slack winds → smaller gradient → even slacker winds → El Nino. Positive feedback makes the system bistable.
Ocean heat capacity, wind stress, Coriolis, Bjerknes feedback, Kelvin/Rossby wave speeds. Non-negotiable physics.
2-7 year discharge cycles. Each event has a unique signature: timing, peak, decay shape, geographic flavor.
A failed monsoon in Karnataka. Texas grid collapse. Coffee spike in Brooklyn. The human story.
| 1st-order | 2nd-order | 3rd-order | Mental model |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pacific SST +2C | India monsoon -8% | Rice export bans → food inflation → unrest | Inelastic supply |
| Trade winds slack | Coral bleaching SE Asia / GBR | Tourism hit · fisheries collapse · slow recovery | Hysteresis |
| Jet stream south | SW US heat dome + grid stress | ERCOT spikes → industrial curtailments → chip delays | Brittle infra |
| Brazil NE drought | Coffee/soy yields down | BRL weakens → debt-service stress → downgrade risk | FX-commodity loop |
| Hormuz risk | Nitrogen / potash supply down | India yields down further → next-year seed cycle hit | Compounding shocks |
| Andes flooding | Anchovy fishery collapse | Fishmeal prices → pig/poultry → meat prices | Food-web propagation |
Where the battery discharges — regional impacts, crop life cycles, and the India double-whammy.
Click any region for the El Nino signature and historical precedent.
Every fire on this globe is a real event from NASA's Earth Observatory Natural Event Tracker (EONET) — each keeps its official source link (IRWIN, InciWeb, national agencies). No invented data, no forecasts. EONET keeps an incident open until an official close is issued, so brightness here encodes how recently each fire was reported.
| Fire | Region | Size (ac) ▾ | Last reported | Source |
|---|
8B humans run on a tiny number of crops in a tiny number of countries. El Nino rewrites the yield map.
FAO & USDA, ranked by 2025 dollar value. Risk tags reflect 2026 exposure.
Shock 1: El Nino drags monsoon below long-period average. Below 90% LPA = drought threshold.
Shock 2: Hormuz / Iran tensions threaten urea + potash. Nitrogen-dependent rice/wheat exposed.
Compound: Bad monsoon + fertilizer shortfall = multi-year setback through soil, seed, and debt cycles.
High-export crops transmit price shocks globally. High-domestic crops transmit hunger locally.
"Brazil is now #1 ag exporter - soy, beef, sugar, coffee, OJ. A bad NE Brazil year rolls into BRL, the bond curve, and breakfast prices in NY."
"AU is the wheat swing producer. When India fails, the world looks to Australia. In El Nino, Australia is also drying out. Two top suppliers down at once."
"Biology adapts. Drought-tolerant rice, heat-tolerant wheat, soy moving north into Canada. The next decade of breeding is the play."
Five-stage life cycle per commodity. Hover any stage for the choke and historical precedent.
Jun-Jul monsoon · India/SE Asia
Onset late
Aug-Sep tillering
Deficit risk
Oct-Nov Kharif
-5 to -12%
Mumbai, Bangkok, HCMC
Ban risk
Asia, W. Africa
Spike 20-40%
May-Jul AU · Nov US
AU dry
Spring Eurasia + NA
US OK
Nov-Dec AU
AU -20%
Black Sea, Gulf, PNW
Tight stocks
MENA + S Asia
MENA exposed
Sep-Nov BR soy
NE drought
BR summer rains
-6 to -10%
Feb-May BR
Palm down
Santos, Sumatra
Logistics OK
Feed, oil, biodiesel
Meat up
Simulate the system, see the probabilistic forecast, then set the monitoring cadence. From observation to action.
Move levers. Watch outputs. Compare to history. Pass the quiz.
If you had traded a commodity basket using a simple ENSO rule, what would have happened? Configure a signal threshold, lag, and holding period, then run it through 54 years of ONI data and eleven historical events. Equity curve, drawdown, Sharpe, trade-by-trade P&L — all client-side, no backend.
| Event | Peak ONI | Entry | Exit | Dir | Basket Δ | P&L | Equity |
|---|
Illustrative backtest. Uses indexed proxy prices from World Bank Pink Sheet · FAO · ICE · CME settlements compiled per event. No slippage, financing, futures-roll cost, or survivorship adjustment. Equal-weight equal-vol sizing. Real implementation would require futures curve management and risk-sized position scaling. Past performance does not predict future results. Educational tool only.
Three weighted scenarios spanning Nino 3.4 peak intensity, monsoon outcome, food prices, world GDP drag, and CPI impact. Probabilities synthesize IRI plume + NMME + ECMWF + UKMO + JMA · consensus as of May 2026.
Leading indicators, thresholds, and update cadences. Built for analysts, traders, policymakers, and humanitarian operators.
| Signal | Threshold | Implication | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nino 3.4 weekly | >+2.5°C | Super-Nino territory | Move to upside scenario weighting |
| India monsoon Jun cum. | < 85% LPA | Drought declaration probable | Stockpile rice, FX hedges INR |
| FAO FPI MoM | >+3% | Acceleration signal | Re-test EM CPI assumptions |
| NASA FIRMS SE Asia | > 5x baseline | Peat-fire CO2 release | Palm oil long, AQI advisory |
| Hormuz incident | any | Urea/potash supply hit | Compound shock - tier-1 risk |
| USDM D4 expansion | > 3 states | Exceptional drought widening | Crop insurance + reservoirs |
| SOI 30-day | < -1.5 | Walker collapse confirmed | Confidence in base case ↑ |
| Kelvin pulse east-Pac arrival | any new | Re-warming push | Track for ~6-8 weeks lag |
Long basket: ICE sugar, ICE arabica, BMD palm, CBOT soy. Short: EM food-CPI sensitive currencies (INR, PHP). FX pair: BRL watch as ag exporter rev offset.
Build buffer rice stocks Q2/Q3 2026. Pre-position fertilizer subsidies. Strengthen social-safety net cash transfers. Diplomatic engagement on export bans.
Lock in palm/sugar/coffee Q3 needs now. Plan ERCOT cooling load scenarios. Hedge urea exposure. Test supply-chain resilience for India / Indonesia / Brazil sourcing.
All figures from NOAA, IRI, WMO, FAO, USDA, World Bank. Refresh simulates the daily 24h pull.
| Dataset | Provider | Cadence | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| ONI 1950-present | NOAA CPC | Monthly | cpc.ncep.noaa.gov |
| Nino 3.4 SST 1870-present | NOAA PSL | Monthly | psl.noaa.gov |
| ENSO Plume | IRI Columbia | Monthly | iri.columbia.edu |
| State of the Climate | WMO | Annual | wmo.int |
| Food Price Index | FAO | Monthly | fao.org |
| WASDE crop outlook | USDA | Monthly | usda.gov |
| Commodity prices | World Bank | Monthly | worldbank.org |
| India IMD monsoon | IMD | Weekly | mausam.imd.gov.in |
| ENSO explainer + status | NOAA Climate.gov | Weekly | climate.gov/enso |
| Realtime El Nino measurements | NOAA PMEL TAO/TRITON | Realtime | pmel.noaa.gov |
| ENSO Diagnostic Discussion | NOAA CPC | Monthly (2nd Thu) | cpc.ncep.noaa.gov |
| El Nino & agriculture drought | Drought.gov (NIDIS) | Weekly | drought.gov |
| US Drought Monitor | NDMC / USDA / NOAA | Weekly (Thu) | droughtmonitor.unl.edu |
| WMO El Nino / La Nina update | WMO | Quarterly | community.wmo.int |
| Ocean & tropical analysis | Tropical Tidbits | Daily | tropicaltidbits.com/analysis/ocean |
| Active tropical storms | Tropical Tidbits | Realtime | tropicaltidbits.com/storminfo |
| Weather radar & observations | Weather Underground | Realtime | wunderground.com |
| Free weather API (no key) | Open-Meteo | Realtime | open-meteo.com |
| Natural events feed | NASA EONET | Realtime | eonet.gsfc.nasa.gov |
| Crop Monitor for AMIS | GEOGLAM | Monthly | cropmonitor.org |
| Food security & analysis | FAO GIEWS | Monthly | fao.org/giews |
| WFP HungerMap LIVE | UN WFP | Daily | hungermap.wfp.org |
| Active fires (MODIS/VIIRS) | NASA FIRMS | Realtime | firms.modaps.eosdis.nasa.gov |
| Global disaster alerts | GDACS (UN/EU) | Realtime | gdacs.org |
| WMO Severe Weather Centre | WMO | Realtime | severeweather.wmo.int |
| IMF World Economic Outlook | IMF | Semi-annual | imf.org/WEO |
In production the daily refresh fetches this schema.
A first-principles climate-and-markets intelligence system, designed to make global ENSO mechanics legible to operators, analysts, and citizens. Single-file. Open public data. WCAG 2.2 AA.
NOAA · IRI · WMO · FAO · USDA · World Bank · Open-Meteo · NASA EONET · IMF