by Michael Snyder, End Of The American Dream:

The Pacific Ocean is aggressively heating up, and that means big trouble for the months ahead. It is being projected that we will experience a “Super El Niño” similar to the one that the world experienced in 1877 and 1878. That “Super El Niño” created horrifying droughts and famines all over the planet. As a result, more than 50 million people died. It truly was one of the worst environmental disasters in recorded history, and now a repeat performance is on the way.
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Each “El Niño” is different.
Some are quite weak, and some are quite strong.
Unfortunately, scientists are telling us that the “El Niño” that is coming in the middle of this year will be immensely powerful…
Multiple forecast systems, spanning the United States, Europe, Japan, and Australia, project that an El Niño event will emerge by mid-2026. Some model runs go further, tracking into territory that would rival or exceed the most powerful El Niño episodes ever recorded. The last time the Pacific warmed this aggressively was during 1877 and 1878, when the resulting droughts and harvest failures across India, China, and Brazil contributed to famines that killed tens of millions of people. That history, combined with an ocean already running hotter than any 19th-century baseline, has forecasters treating the current signal with unusual urgency.
I really don’t understand why more people aren’t focusing on this.
We aren’t just talking about a minor shift in the weather.
According to the Washington Post, the “Super El Niño” of 1877 and 1878 resulted in a global famine that killed over 50 million people…
The climatic shift devastated crops nearly 150 years ago, raising the question of whether a similar disruption could threaten global food security yet again. The strongest El Niño on record from 1877 to 1878 fueled conditions that led to a global famine which killed more than 50 million people across India, China, Brazil and elsewhere. That was 3 to 4 percent of the estimated global population at the time, equal to at least 250 million people if it happened today.
“It was arguably the worst environmental disaster to ever befall humanity,” researchers have written about the event.
This disaster took years to unfold. Drought began spreading across the tropics and subtropics in 1875. In the years that followed, a combination of strong climate forces in the Indian and Atlantic oceans formed alongside the record-breaking El Niño, amplifying and prolonging the drought.
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