The Pacific Ocean is acting out, and the evidence suggests it’s getting louder. Scientists are increasingly convinced that human-driven climate change is not just happening alongside the El Niño weather pattern—it’s actively supercharging it.
When El Niño arrives, the trade winds weaken and warm water shifts toward the Americas, triggering a cascade of extreme weather worldwide. Historically, this was a natural, cyclical phenomenon. Now, rising global temperatures are acting as a force multiplier. Warmer ocean surfaces provide more fuel for the heat-driven engine of El Niño, leading to more intense droughts in some regions and catastrophic flooding in others.
The impact isn’t theoretical. During the 2023-2024 cycle, record-breaking sea surface temperatures pushed the system into uncharted territory. Researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) noted that the baseline temperature of the Pacific is higher than it was even thirty years ago. When the ocean starts from a warmer “floor,” the temperature spikes during an El Niño event reach levels that were previously considered statistical outliers.
This shift creates a “compounding effect.” It’s no longer just about the temporary shift in winds; it’s about the underlying heat trapped in the deep ocean. This stored energy takes longer to dissipate, effectively stretching the duration and intensity of the event. For farmers in Australia or flood-prone communities in East Africa, this means the “new normal” is increasingly volatile.
Critics of this theory often point to the historical variability of the Pacific. It’s true that El Niño has existed for millennia. However, the current rate of warming is different. The ocean is absorbing about 90% of the excess heat generated by greenhouse gas emissions. That energy has to go somewhere, and the Pacific is the world’s largest heat sink.
The consequences are already being felt in global commodity markets. Droughts in Southeast Asia have tightened rice supplies, while erratic rainfall in South America has disrupted coffee and soybean harvests. These aren’t just weather stories; they are economic shocks rippling through global supply chains.
We are moving into an era where natural climate variability is being hijacked by the climate crisis. The Pacific is no longer just shifting; it’s being pushed to extremes that leave little room for error. The question is no longer whether climate change is affecting El Niño, but how much more chaos we’re willing to absorb before the cycle becomes the baseline.
