Weak La Niña conditions are rapidly losing strength across the tropical Pacific, creating a 60% probability of ENSO-neutral conditions through May 2026. This transition coincides with critical planting seasons globally, generating agricultural planning uncertainty that threatens food security in vulnerable regions.
What the evidence shows
Key passages from the source
Human and systemic impacts
Farmers across ENSO-sensitive regions face critical crop planning decisions without reliable seasonal forecasts during the spring predictability barrier. Food prices risk spiking as agricultural uncertainty disrupts global commodity markets, particularly affecting vulnerable populations who spend disproportionate income on food. Rural communities dependent on rain-fed agriculture may experience displacement if planting decisions prove catastrophically wrong. The transition's timing during peak planting seasons amplifies systemic risks to global food security, as farmers cannot rely on historical La Niña patterns while neutral conditions bring inherently unpredictable weather variability.
Broader significance
“”
This ENSO transition represents a perfect storm of agricultural vulnerability, combining maximum forecast uncertainty with critical planting season timing. It demonstrates how climate system transitions can create cascading food security risks even without extreme weather events.