This article argues that the war involving Iran, particularly through the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has driven up oil and fertilizer prices, triggering supply shortages that threaten global agricultural production just as climate pressures intensify. The anticipated arrival of a strong or “super” El Niño is expected to further disrupt weather patterns, compounding droughts, floods, and declining crop yields. Together, these overlapping shocks unfold as a polycrisis, amplifying economic strain, food insecurity, and political instability, and illustrating how crises across systems become entangled and produce impacts greater than their individual effects. The article calls for integrated, cross-sectoral responses, warning that without urgent action, manageable shocks may escalate into systemic breakdowns.
Sky-High Oil Prices. A Fertilizer Shortage. Now Add a “Super El Niño.”
Author(s)
Christopher Collins and Thomas Homer-Dixon
Publication Date
7 April 2026
Publisher
The New Republic
DOI / URL
Resource Type
Op-Ed Commentary
Systems Addressed
Climate • Energy • Food • Geopolitics and International Security
Resource Theme
Learning resource
