Impact Outlook: El Niño 2026–27

El Niño Is Here. Here’s Why That’s a Head Start, Not Just a Headline.

The equatorial Pacific Ocean now reflects El Niño conditions. Forecasters expect it to keep building through the rest of 2026, most likely peaking this fall and winter. Unlike the hazards that arrive with little notice, a developing El Niño announces itself months ahead — and that lead time provides time for early action.

The briefing below explains what we are worried about and what we can do about it. The result is a reshuffled map of risk: heavier rain and flooding in some regions, drought in others, and downstream pressure on food production, water supplies, energy systems, and public health. These are tilts in the odds, not certainties — which is precisely what makes them useful for planning.

At the National Center for Disaster Preparedness, that’s the part we care about most. A seasonal forecast doesn’t tell us exactly what will happen, but it tells us enough to act early — to stress-test water and agriculture plans, position health and emergency resources, and make decisions before conditions force our hand rather than after.

To track how this event unfolds, these regularly updated sources are worth following:

Watch the briefing, then keep an eye on the forecasts. The advantage is in acting early.

Jeff Schlegelmilch, MPH MBA
Director, National Center for Disaster Preparedness
Director of Executive Education and Non-Degree Programs, Columbia Climate School
Associate Professor of Professional Practice
Andrew J. Kruczkiewicz
Senior Staff Associate II, Faculty Lecturer

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