I'm sure most of us have read news reports about the imminent return of the climate phenomenon known as El Nino, possibly in the form of a so-called "super" El Nino, far stronger than "normal" events of this kind. There have been all sorts of alarmist forecasts about drought, flooding, and everything in between. However, the big story may be the effect of this climate phenomenon on global commerce and industry, regardless of whether it's rainy or sunny. TT Club, a "provider of mutual insurance and related risk management services to the international transport and logistics industry", examines the implications.
El Niño events are part of a naturally occurring climate cycle, but “super” events are characterised by exceptionally high sea surface temperature anomalies, which are far less frequent and significantly more disruptive. Current forecasts are suggesting that a very strong event is increasingly likely, with some indicating increases well above historical norms. The result is not a single point of failure, but rather a synchronised, multi-regional disruption that has potential to affect the interconnected global supply chain.
. . .
Perhaps the most concerning aspect of the current outlook is the convergence of climate and geopolitical risk factors. When overlaid with El Niño-induced climate shocks, the potential for cascading effects increases significantly.
For example:
- Reduced fertiliser availability may exacerbate the impact of drought on crop yields
- Higher fuel costs may increase the cost of transporting goods
- Trade route disruptions may amplify delays caused by weather-related events
- This interconnected risk landscape highlights the need to view El Niño not as a standalone hazard, but as part of a broader system of interdependent risks.
. . .
The critical point for global businesses is that exposure is rarely limited to the location of the physical hazard. Organisations may face indirect impacts through suppliers, commodity markets, logistics networks, energy systems, insurance costs and customer demand.
Key global vulnerabilities include:
- Food and commodity price inflation driven by crop losses or supply uncertainty
- Disruption to agricultural, industrial and consumer-goods supply chains
- Transport delays, port disruption and reduced reliability across maritime and inland logistics routes
- Energy market volatility linked to higher demand, reduced hydropower output and infrastructure stress
- Increased insurance, financing and working-capital pressures as businesses respond to greater uncertainty
For internationally exposed organisations, these second-order and third-order effects may prove just as significant as direct physical risks. The practical implication is that El Niño should be assessed not only by geography, but by dependency: where goods are sourced, how they are transported, which inputs are most constrained and where alternative capacity exists.
There's more at the link.
That's an often underestimated factor in many plans: military, political, business, disaster, whatever. A factor that is described in geographical terms - like El Nino, often termed the "southern oscillation" of weather patterns - can have effects far outside that geographical area. I'm sure most US businesses on the East Coast aren't planning for any major disruption due to weather that might affect the West Coast of this country, but that's very short-sighted. What about Europe, or Asia? I'm sure many nations on those continents are dismissing El Nino as "someone else's problem", but if, as the article suggests, we define it by dependency on economic activity in the area where it occurs, that dependency reaches into every corner of global markets, both imports and exports.
Even on a small scale, in terms of personal planning for the next year or two, this bears thinking about. For example:
- Is my employer (and hence my job) likely to be affected by El Nino, positively or negatively? Could it determine whether or not I have a job at all this time next year?
- What about our household emergency planning? Are we assuming that certain staple foods and basic necessities will always be both available and affordable, or might the advent of El Nino-related weather patterns affect that?
- Are we planning to travel anywhere over the next year or two? Will airline flights be affected by El Nino? Will they become more or less affordable? What alternatives are there?
Peter
One of the things that God has been teaching me about over the past few years has been the issue of worry. When it comes to stuff like this, I fall back on three words: maybe, maybe not.
ReplyDeleteAs God doesn't speak to me directly His word tells me:
Delete"A prudent man sees danger ahead and takes precautions, but the simple or naive continue on and suffer the consequences" (Proverbs 22:3; 27:12).
Food issues and so on are in the mix.
Do what you think is prudent.
A worrying fraction of the population can't project the DIRECT effects of their actions, like 'loot the local store then complain when it is closed' or 'make the electrical grid less reliable so manufacturing leaves the area' direct outcomes.
ReplyDeleteThinking about even second-order effects is entirely beyond their mental capacity.
Weather is going to happen and Euro Greenies are going to dig in and refuse to adjust their policies to reflect the current reality.
Objectively speaking, it may be a reasonable concern, and a reason for preparation, but it is not, in my estimation, a greater concern than the conflict in Ukraine, for instance. That has directly increased fertilizer and grain costs, impacted oil prices and transportation networks, and increased insurance costs. As with all things, preparation is fine, fear is not. Be not afraid.
ReplyDeleteThe big advantage to El Nino is the higher water surface temperature means higher evaporation leading to higher snow pack this winter which will help refill the lakes and reservoirs that are rather low as the Midwest has been in a drought for a few years now.
ReplyDeleteAs for those who are "What? Me Worry?", I have "taken no thought for tomorrow" until it is now "tomorrow".
ReplyDeleteI'm planning to move cross country next spring. Believe me, I worry.
Funny how this is just 'now' becoming an issue, since it's been around since man first went to sea. Anyone who underestimates the weather's impact on everything is either a fool or an idiot, IMHO.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to the Super El Niño breaking the 3 year drought here in Coastal SC. Who cares about California. When the actually get a rain, they just squander it on bait fish. They can't be bothered to actually store any of it.
ReplyDeleteThere have supposedly been five Super El Ninos since the 1950s. I don't remember any of them. Maybe it will finally rain in the desert southwest.
ReplyDelete