El Nino Conditions Are Present, US Forecaster Says

June 11 (Reuters) – El Nino conditions are present ⁠and ⁠expected to strengthen into ⁠the Northern Hemisphere winter of 2026–27, the U.S. Climate ​Prediction Center said on Thursday.

The U.S. government forecaster added that El Nino ‌conditions developed over the past ‌month.

• The El Nino is a phenomenon that occurs naturally, when ⁠weakening trade ⁠winds cause warmer ocean waters to build up in the ​central and eastern equatorial Pacific. This typically leads to higher global temperatures and altered weather patterns, bringing drought to some regions and heavy rainfall to ​others.

• “El Nino is likely to have a negative impact on crop yields ⁠in ⁠Southeast Asia and India, ⁠where El ​Nino is typically associated with below-normal rainfall,” said Kyle Tapley, enterprise sales ​executive at Vaisala Xweather’s ⁠WeatherDesk.

• The monsoon delivers nearly 70% of India’s rainfall and is vital for the agricultural sector, which accounts for about 18% of the nearly $4 trillion economy. Below-normal rainfall could mean smaller harvests of crops such ⁠as rice, cotton and soybeans, while also weighing on winter crops.

• Meanwhile, ⁠Indonesian rice farmers are racing to get ahead of the usual planting schedule as they battle the threat of a lengthy dry spell this year. Malaysia’s economic minister warned that El Nino could cause crop yields to fall by an average of between 8% and 10% this year.

• “El Nino typically leads to a less-active U.S. hurricane season and we expect a below-normal Atlantic ⁠hurricane season this year. However, it is important to remember that a strong hurricane is still possible even in a less-active hurricane season,” Tapley said.

• The U.S. hurricane season began on June ​1 and runs through November 30.

(Reporting by Ashitha Shivaprasad ​in Bengaluru; Editing by Mark Porter)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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