El Nino 2026 could arrive early, raising Thailand’s heatwave risk from March to May


Image from The Nation Thailand/ANN

BANGKOK (The Nation Thailand/ANN): Kasetsart University economist Dr Witsanu Attavanich says Thailand has entered the “mid-phase” of El Niño, with full conditions likely by May 2026 and elevated heatwave risks—especially in the South and lower East.

Dr Witsanu Attavanich, an associate professor of economics at Kasetsart University and an expert in resource, environmental and climate-change economics, provided an update on Thailand’s flood-drought outlook as of February 16, 2026, saying the country has entered the “mid-phase” of the El Niño phenomenon and is likely to shift into a full El Niño by May 2026—earlier than previously expected.

He said the event could persist until at least February 2027.

He warned the shift could raise Thailand’s exposure to heat hazards, dry spells, and more variable rainfall across multiple regions. During the hot season from March to May 2026, temperatures nationwide are expected to remain above average, with elevated heat continuing through August 2026. The South and the lower Eastern region face a higher heatwave risk than other areas.

Dr Witsanu said data from ECMWF (the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts) indicates Thailand has entered the mid-phase and is likely to move into El Niño conditions in May 2026, potentially intensifying in November 2026 and remaining at a moderate-to-strong level into early 2027.

Meanwhile, NOAA models in the United States point in the same direction that El Niño is expected to occur, but estimate the probability of a strong El Niño at only 14% for September-November 2026, highlighting uncertainty over severity even as the overall trajectory aligns.

March-August 2026: temperatures nationwide higher than normal. March-May 2026: high heatwave risk, with the South and East requiring closer monitoring

May-July 2026: possible dry spells in the South, the upper North, and parts of the Northeast

June-August 2026: the West and lower North may see higher-than-normal rainfall, including Tak, Kamphaeng Phet, Nakhon Sawan, Uthai Thani, Suphan Buri, and Kanchanaburi

Dr Witsanu added that IRI Columbia University data also suggests some areas may begin seeing signs of reduced rainfall from March to June 2026, becoming clearer in May to July, reflecting dry-spell risk in the early rainy season. -- The Nation Thailand/ANN

 

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