Global Weather Disruptions Could Impact Metal Prices This Winter

 | Nov 21, 2017 02:22AM ET

There is widespread agreement and considerable evidence to suggest the global weather patterns of El Niño and La Niña can have a significant impact on commodity prices.

But impacting average temperatures and rainfall as these weather patterns do, the most significant impact is, not surprisingly, on agricultural commodities in the grain sector.

As Agriweb observes, “Dry weather conditions in the U.S. can threaten the development of corn, soybeans and wheat crops, and dry conditions in Argentina and southern Brazil can impact corn and soybeans.”

El Niño and La Niña broadly act as opposites, reflecting as they do the interaction of large areas of warm water in the Pacific with global weather patterns. We were under the influence of El Niño effects last year, but have recently moved into conditions meeting the La Niña pattern. The La Niña pattern is characterized by a shrinking of a large pool of warm water in the Pacific as a strengthening of westbound trade winds carry warm surface water from the east to west and allow an upwelling of colder waters in eastern regions. The overall temperature of surface water decreases and on the western side of the Pacific the arrival of warmer waters increases rainfall while on the western side cooler temperatures tend to reduce rainfall, resulting in drought conditions. The last La Nina year was 2011-2012 where drought conditions caused a grain prices to surge.

According to the Climate Change Centre, drawing on work by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), NOAA’s National Weather Service, released in a recent report, “El Nino/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) Diagnostic Discussion,” La Niña conditions have a 65-75% chance of prevailing through to the February-April 2018 period.

But what impact can this have on metal markets?

Clearly, mining and metal extraction are less weather-dependent than the growing of crops. However, while a shortage of water for the irrigation of field crops can be dramatic for crop yields, it can also be significant for the generation of hydroelectric power for the mining sector and metal smelting in certain regions of the world.