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Friday, 5 June 2026 · Edition of 06:00 CET

El Niño's Arrival Confirmed as Anomalous Atlantic Warmth Fuels 'Super' Event Fears

Pacific warming crosses key threshold, satellite data reveal stark Atlantic heat anomalies, and global agencies warn of a potentially severe 2026 episode with far-reaching economic and climatic consequences.

Economy10 outlets2 languages3 min readUpd. 07:53

The El Niño climate pattern has officially taken hold, according to the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), with Pacific Ocean surface temperatures surpassing the critical 0.5°C threshold in May. The development, confirmed in early June, aligns with projections from the World Meteorological Organization, which now pegs the probability of an event consolidating in the coming months at 90 per cent. US government agencies, meanwhile, had estimated an 82 per cent chance of onset during the May-July window, and see a near-certainty — 96 per cent — of its persistence through the northern hemisphere winter.

Viewed from Buenos Aires, while the Southern Cone braces for the disruptive rains and temperature swings typical of a strong El Niño, European satellite monitoring has injected fresh urgency. Imagery from Copernicus, the EU's earth observation programme, detected sea-surface anomalies of up to 5°C above normal across vast stretches of the Atlantic and Mediterranean in late May — an ominous signal that researchers believe could amplify the Pacific-driven event. South American meteorologists remained cautious, however, noting that not all regional vagaries are linked to the phenomenon. A cold-core low currently spinning off Chile's coast, for instance, triggered precipitation in Argentina's Salta province while the overall system remained in a neutral phase.

Analysts in New Delhi flag a different threat: India's informal economy, still reeling from heat stress and erratic rainfall, faces acute crop losses and food inflation should the monsoon falter. Brazil, too, is on alert; climate modeller José Marengo warns that some simulations point to a 4°C warming in the central Pacific, potentially yielding a "super strong" event. Yet the breathless talk of a "Godzilla Niño" — a term coined by a NASA scientist for past extreme episodes — is being played down by most experts, who insist that classifications based on measured indices are more useful than alarmist labels.

What troubles long-range forecasters, viewed from London or Rome, is not merely the immediate intensity of this cycle but the backdrop against which it unfolds. Even a moderate El Niño today, amplified by decades of atmospheric heating, will produce regional impacts more severe than a comparable event a generation ago. As one Italian analysis soberly concluded, future episodes, even if not stronger in raw terms, will be far more devastating simply because the world is hotter. For global commodity markets and vulnerable populations from Central America to the Indo-Gangetic plain, the coming months will test the resilience of early warning systems and adaptive capacity alike.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa latinoamericanaStampa indiana e sudasiaticaStampa europea continentale · mediterranea
Stampa latinoamericanaallarmeurgenza

Warnings over a Super El Niño are escalating: satellite data shows thermal anomalies of up to 5°C in both the Pacific and the Atlantic, and the probability of the phenomenon taking hold in the coming months has reached 90%. In Argentina, alerts are multiplying for three kinds of extreme events – heatwaves, torrential rains, and storms – that could hit the population and farmlands directly.

Stampa indiana e sudasiaticaindignazioneurgenza

El Niño is not just a weather disturbance; it is a development crisis poised to hit India. The familiar shrug with which the country greets extreme heat and erratic rainfall overlooks a far deeper danger – heat stress, water scarcity, crop losses, and food inflation will strip away the resilience of the informal economy.

Stampa europea continentale/ mediterraneascetticismodistacco

Behind the sensationalist headlines about a ‘Godzilla Niño’ lies a more measured reality: the probability of El Niño developing by September is 80%, but most models point to a moderate event. The real cause for concern is not this particular episode, but the certainty that even more devastating phenomena will arrive in the coming decades.

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10 sources · 2 languages · 24h window

InternazionaleJun 5, 05:42
La GacetaJun 5, 00:19
C5NJun 5, 04:40
The Times of IndiaJun 5, 00:19
ClarínJun 4, 19:18
Radio MitreJun 4, 20:16
El TribunoJun 5, 00:19
PerfilJun 4, 23:18