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:

MetricBefore Ban (2022-23)After Ban (2023-24)
India total rice exports21.3 million metric tons14.3 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 production135.5 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:

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:

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.