By: Chico Harlan
Published in: *The New York Times*
Date: May 20, 2026
The biggest episodes of the past have altered the course of human events,
according to researchers. An emerging one is drawing historic comparisons.

Well before it was understood, the El Niño phenomenon was leaving its marks
on humanity.

El Niño is the name given to powerful shifts in Pacific Ocean winds and
water temperatures that can drastically transform global weather patterns.
Over the centuries these natural patterns have sparked epic droughts and
heat waves, and have intensified epidemics.

Some academics even claim to see the fingerprints of El Niño on political
and economic crises in ancient Egypt, or on the downfall of the Moche
civilization in present-day Peru, more than 1,000 years ago. And in 1877
and 1878, a famine fueled by El Niño killed millions of people across the
tropics, hardening inequities that, as one research paper put it
<https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/clim/31/23/jcli-d-18-0159.1.xml>,
“would later be characterized as the ‘first world’ and ‘third world.’”

Right now, the world is entering a new El Niño phase. Researchers are
warning it could be one of the strongest on record and are invoking this
history
<https://www.severe-weather.eu/long-range-2/super-el-nino-2026-record-breaking-intensity-forecast-weather-impacts-united-states-canada-europe-fa/>
 as an admonition that natural forces, when they reach their highest
magnitude, can lead to profound volatility and hardship.

Of course, the current El Niño is in the early stages of formation and
might not live up to the hype. But if the forecasts prove accurate, it
would be a whopper and its consequences would play out across a world that
has grown far more resilient but also has new vulnerabilities.

Compared with those early times, countries today track El Niño events with
oceanic gauges and early warning systems. Agriculture is far more
sophisticated, and many countries vulnerable to food shocks hold strategic
grain reserves. Nobody is predicting large-scale famine.

But experts say an El Niño would add pressure to an already precarious
global system. Fertilizer shortages caused by the effective closure of the
Strait of Hormuz are straining farmers. Rising energy prices resulting from
war in Ukraine and Iran are eating into countries’ budgets. And a
longstanding safety net has been weakened by cuts in foreign aid to
poorer countries
by from the United States and other nations.

There’s possibility for “a perfect storm of factors,” said Laurie Laybourn,
who leads the Strategic Climate Risks Initiative, a think tank based in
Britain. “You could see an increase in poverty, malnutrition, conflict,
indebtedness, and all of the domino effects that come from that.”

If history offers any lesson, it’s that strong El Niño events, like the one
that started in 1877, play upon existing weaknesses. That El Niño led to
punishingly dry conditions that spanned the world, including Brazil,
southern Africa and China.

Few places were hit harder than southern India. Contemporaneous accounts
<https://archive.org/details/faminecampaignin01digbuoft/page/n10/mode/1up?ref=ol>
 describe stick-thin people trying to survive on roots and even selling off
children they couldn’t afford to care for.

But for all the power of nature, man-made factors very likely raised the
death toll, which ultimately rose to tens of millions of people. At the
time, India was under British colonial rule, and the historian Mike Davis,
in his 2001 book “Late Victorian Holocausts,” portrays Britain as
prioritizing its imperial interests by maintaining huge grain exports from
India even as Indians starved.

“Londoners were in effect eating India’s bread,” Mr. Davis wrote.

Of course, there was another factor complicating the response. People at
the time had no idea why the monsoon rains had failed. Scientists in the
19th century theorized a link with weakened sunspot activity
<https://www.nature.com/articles/016425b0>.

But a far better picture emerged in the 1960s, when Jacob Bjerknes, a
meteorologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, pieced together
the global consequences of the feedback between the ocean and atmosphere in
the Pacific. Centuries earlier, Peruvians had noticed that sometimes
tropical fish would unexpectedly show up on their shores around Christmas,
a phenomenon eventually named “El Niño,” or “the Christ child” in Spanish.
Dr. Bjerknes made the connection: The Pacific warming that the Peruvians
had spotted was, in fact, altering weather patterns around the world.

“That was the big bang” realization, said Michael McPhaden, a senior
scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “He
opened up a new universe of study.”

By the 1980s, scientists were on a vessel in the middle of the Pacific,
anchoring buoys that enabled improved monitoring of ocean temperature.
Separately, researchers sought out clues for El Niño’s place in human
history, studying tree ring samples, coral reefs and sailors’ logbooks, and
creating a crude timeline of its spikes.

The records weren’t sharp enough to measure past events with certainty. But
they have led to speculation about the role of El Niño events across
history, including that an El Niño in the late 1700s might
<https://scispace.com/pdf/the-great-el-nino-of-1789-93-and-its-global-consequences-3m3qd7unpn.pdf>
 have played a role in the crop failures that contributed to uprisings in
the French Revolution.

For the 1877 El Niño, the one that hit India so hard, the documentation is
better, but still involves guesswork. “Working with nineteenth-century sea
surface temperature data is a bit like assembling a puzzle with many
missing pieces,” Boyin Huang, a NOAA oceanographer who has studied the
scale of the event <https://repository.library.noaa.gov/view/noaa/46581>,
wrote in an email.

El Niño events are measured by looking at temperature levels in a vast
rectangular zone in the central Pacific. In a moderate El Niño,
temperatures might climb, say, 1 degree Celsius, or 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit,
above a longer-term average. But in the biggest El Niños of the past 50
years — the ones that started in 1982, 1997, and 2015 — temperatures have
soared 2 degrees Celsius or more beyond the norm. Each of those events
levied a global economic toll
<https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adf2983>.

This year, many forecasts say the temperature could increase by an
unprecedented 3 degrees Celsius
<https://dashboard.theclimatebrink.com/#enso>. Even the 1877 El Niño, by
the best estimates, didn’t have that magnitude.

“A number of the models now show a real chance for a record-setting El Niño
event,” said Zeke Hausfather, a research scientist at Berkeley Earth. “It
is still too early to know for sure.”

El Niño events typically peak in strength late in a calendar year, and then
cause warmer global temperatures on land in the months that follow. As a
result, many scientists predict that 2027 will be the warmest year on
record.

Every El Niño is distinct. But in general, it makes for wetter conditions
in some parts of the Americas while suppressing the Atlantic hurricane
season. The phenomenon raises the risk of dryness in South and Southeast
Asia, Australia, and southern Africa.

In India, which tends to be drier during El Niño periods, the government
has already held preparatory meetings. Vimal Mishra, a professor at the
Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar, said his country did not face
risks on the same scale as it did more than a century ago. “If one year the
monsoon fails, we won’t see famine,” he said. He cited India’s public
distribution system, which guarantees access to basic staples at subsidized
prices.

But Dr. Mishra said India, like other countries, still faced risk. If there
is very little rainfall, people will draw down on savings. They’ll spend
less. They’ll close down businesses. During droughts, school dropout rates
rise. “It has a direct impact on the growth rate of India’s economy,” he
said.

Dr. Mishra has studied India’s major famines and he draws a direct line
between the one from the 1870s and the preparations India is now taking.
“It gives us an idea of how to be better prepared,” he said. “It shows you,
this is the worst that could happen.”

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