Super El Niño 2026: Which Countries Are Most at Risk?
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A Super El Niño does not hit the world evenly. One patch of unusually warm water in the Pacific can shift rainfall across the planet, flooding some countries, drying out others, disrupting harvests, raising food prices, and pushing already fragile systems to the edge. In this video, we follow the global chain reaction country by country: Peru and Ecuador facing floods, fishery collapse, and banana crop damage; Indonesia, Vietnam, India, and Australia facing drought, fires, food shortages, coffee losses, and weak monsoons; California and the southern United States facing atmospheric rivers and flood risk; southern Africa facing crop failure, blackouts, and hunger; and Europe feeling only the faintest end of the chain. This is not just a weather story. It is a global stress test for food, power, infrastructure, and inequality. The disaster may begin in the Pacific, but the bill reaches almost everyone — even at the supermarket checkout. -- DISCUSSIONS & SOCIAL MEDIA Commercial Purpose
Tags: insane curiosity, space, science, astronomy, super el nino 2026, el nino 2026 countries, Super El Niño, El Niño countries at risk, El Niño impacts, extreme weather, global weather patterns, ENSO, Pacific Ocean warming, Southern Africa drought, rice prices, global food crisis, climate change, global warming, weather science, natural disasters
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