When the Monsoon Fails: El Niño, India's Rice Ban, and Global Food Prices
Published: May 22, 2026 · 11 min read
On July 20, 2023, the Indian government issued an order that would ripple through grocery stores from Lagos to Manila. Non-basmati white rice exports — the affordable staple that feeds hundreds of millions of people across Africa and Asia — were banned, effective immediately.
The trigger wasn't a war or a trade dispute. It was a weather forecast.
NOAA had just confirmed that El Niño conditions were developing. India's meteorological department was warning of below-normal monsoon rainfall — the monsoon that provides 80% of the country's annual water and irrigates its rice paddies. The last thing India wanted was to export its food and then face a domestic shortage. So it shut the door.
What happened next is a case study in how a Pacific Ocean temperature anomaly becomes a food crisis halfway around the world.
India's Rice: The Numbers Behind the Ban
Any discussion of global rice markets starts with one fact: India accounts for roughly 40% of global rice exports. That's more than the next three exporters (Thailand, Vietnam, Pakistan) combined. When India sneezes, the rice market catches pneumonia.
Here's what happened in numbers:
| Metric | Before Ban (2022-23) | After Ban (2023-24) |
|---|---|---|
| India total rice exports | 21.3 million metric tons | 14.3 MMT (↓33%) |
| Non-basmati white rice exports | ~6.2 MMT | ~0.8 MMT (↓87%) |
| Indian rice exports to Africa | ~10 MMT | ~5.7 MMT (↓43%) |
| Indian rice production | 135.5 MMT | ~128 MMT (↓5.5%) |
India's August 2023 — the peak of the monsoon season — was the hottest and driest on record. Rainfall fell significantly below normal. Rice planting area shrank. The government's calculus was straightforward: secure domestic supply first, worry about export markets later.
The Price Shock: 38% in One Year
Global rice prices hit 15-year highs in August 2023. By December 2023, prices had risen 38% from a year earlier, according to Asian Development Bank data. Thai white rice (5% broken), a global benchmark, averaged $615 per metric ton during the ban period — roughly 20% above pre-ban levels.
The shock wasn't just about magnitude. It was about speed. Food commodity markets typically adjust gradually. This happened in weeks.
For context: global wheat and corn prices spiked after Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. But those markets are deep and liquid, with dozens of exporters. Rice is different. Nearly 85% of global rice exports come from just five countries: India, Thailand, Vietnam, Pakistan, and the United States. When the largest one exits the market overnight, there's simply not enough spare capacity to absorb the shock.
Who Got Hit Hardest: Africa's Rice Dependency
The ban's impact was devastatingly unequal. Sub-Saharan Africa absorbed 75% of the global export decline from India's restrictions.
The numbers tell a brutal story of dependency:
- 17 African countries sourced more than 60% of their rice imports from India
- 9 African countries sourced more than 80% from India
- Estimated additional cost to sub-Saharan African consumers: ~$3.8 billion
- Countries like Benin, Togo, Djibouti, and Guinea — importing 80-95% of their rice from India — had almost no alternative suppliers at comparable prices
When a country imports over 80% of a staple food from a single source, and that source cuts supply by 87% overnight, you don't get a "price increase." You get a supply crisis. People don't pay more — they can't buy at all.
The Winners: Pakistan, Vietnam, Thailand
Trade disruptions create winners as well as losers. Pakistan's rice export earnings nearly doubled during the ban period, with export volume up roughly 50%. Vietnam expanded planting area to capture market share. Thailand boosted exports, though water scarcity concerns limited how much it could ramp up.
These shifts might prove temporary — India lifted most restrictions by October 2024 after a better-than-expected harvest. Global prices fell back close to pre-crisis levels. But the episode exposed a structural vulnerability: global rice markets are far more concentrated than wheat or corn markets, and the dominant player sits in one of the most El Niño-sensitive agricultural regions on Earth.
The Irony: India's Domestic Prices Stayed High
Perhaps the most striking finding from post-crisis analysis is that the export ban didn't even achieve its primary goal. Retail rice prices in India remained roughly 10% above pre-ban levels throughout the restriction period.
Why? Because India's domestic rice prices were being driven by post-farm-gate costs — transportation, energy, labor, packaging — not by export-driven shortages. The ban addressed a supply problem that didn't exist while creating a real crisis for 42 importing nations.
The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) described the ban as a "blunt instrument" that caused "disproportionate collateral damage." Analysts emphasized that this was "a crisis of price, not of physical shortage" — global rice stocks existed, but they were redistributed at higher cost, with the poorest consumers bearing that cost.
The 2026 Risk: Déjà Vu With Higher Stakes
With the 2026 El Niño developing — NOAA gives an 82% probability of onset by May-July, and 96% by winter — the question isn't whether rice markets will be affected. It's whether the lessons of 2023 have been absorbed.
Several factors make 2026 potentially worse:
- Depleted safety nets: The 2023-24 crisis drew down emergency food reserves in many importing countries. Zambia, Malawi, and Zimbabwe — all hit by El Niño drought — haven't rebuilt stocks.
- Concentration risk unchanged: India still controls 40% of global rice exports. No diversification occurred.
- Forecast lags: The 2023 ban was triggered by an El Niño forecast — before actual crop damage occurred. If the 2026 event strengthens to 1997 levels, the physical crop impact could dwarf what we saw in 2023.
- Compounding from Southern Africa: Southern Africa's 2024 drought devastated regional maize production. A second consecutive poor season in 2026 would eliminate whatever recovery safety margins remain.
El Niño doesn't cause food crises directly. It causes monsoons to weaken, which causes rice planting area to shrink, which causes a government to panic-export-ban, which causes prices to spike in 42 importing nations, which causes families in Lagos and Manila to skip meals. The chain is long — but every link is traceable back to a patch of warm water in the Pacific.
Data sources: IFPRI "India lifts export restrictions on rice" (Oct 2024); Asian Development Bank Asian Development Outlook (April 2024); S&P Global Commodity Insights; FAO Rice Market Monitor (2023-2024); AFP/IBT "Rice price spike offers preview of climate food disruption" (Sep 2023); Indian Ministry of Commerce export data.