The Met Office has officially confirmed that the El Niño weather pattern now poses a direct threat to British food security and is set to roil global commodity markets. For those of us who have watched the bond markets tighten and inflation stubbornly stick above target, this is another unwelcome variable in an already unstable equation.
El Niño, a periodic warming of the Pacific Ocean, historically triggers droughts in Southeast Asia and Australia, while flooding parts of South America. For Britain, the immediate concern is the impact on global grain supplies. Wheat, maize, and soyabean futures have already spiked in early trading as traders price in supply disruptions. The UK imports roughly half its food, and any shock to international harvests will be felt directly at the checkout till. The Bank of England, which has been fighting to drag inflation back to 2 per cent, will find its job considerably harder if food prices accelerate again.
The currency markets have already taken note. Sterling slipped 0.6 per cent against the dollar this morning as capital flight accelerated towards commodities. Gilt yields edged higher as the market priced in the risk of persistent inflation. The fiscal arithmetic is ugly: higher food import costs widen the trade deficit, while higher inflation forces the Bank to keep rates higher for longer. The Treasury's headroom, already wafer thin, is evaporating.
But let's not pretend this is purely a British problem. The global commodity markets are interconnected. A poor harvest in Brazil due to flooding, coupled with drought in Indonesia, will squeeze supply chains from palm oil to coffee. The energy markets will also feel the heat. A weaker monsoon in India could boost coal demand as hydropower falters. Every spike in commodity prices is a tax on consumers and a drag on growth.
What does this mean for the average Briton? Higher food bills, dearer petrol, and a weaker pound when they travel abroad. The government's rhetoric about 'levelling up' and 'food security' will be tested. The Agriculture Bill promised greater self-sufficiency, but that takes years. In the meantime, we are exposed to the whims of Pacific currents.
The markets are now pricing in a 40 per cent chance that the Bank of England will need to raise rates again in November. That would be a bitter pill for an economy barely growing. The Chancellor will have to decide whether to loosen the fiscal reins to cushion the blow or stick to the 'fiscal responsibility' script. My bet is on the latter, given the bond market vigilantes are watching.
This is not a panic. But it is a dose of reality. The El Niño effect will test the resilience of global supply chains, the credibility of central banks, and the patience of consumers. For the City, it means volatility is here to stay. For the government, it means no room for error. And for households, it means the cost-of-living crisis is far from over.








