A 24-Hour Update on Converging Global Supply Shocks: UN Food and Agriculture Organization Cites Strait of Hormuz and El Niño, Identifies Over 20 High-Risk Countries, and Urges Government Preparations
Published: May 26, 2026
By: Zeeshan Khan
Reading time: 16 minutes
Category: Global Economy / Food Security / Energy
Note: May 26, 2026 – This is an update to the May 25, 2026 article: The Compound Shock Intensifies: El Niño Probability Surges to 96%, Strait of Hormuz Remains Blocked, and Global Food Prices Are Already Rising
GENEVA / ROME / WASHINGTON, D.C. – May 26, 2026 – One The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has escalated its assessment dramatically. The FAO has issued a formal Early Warning on Food Security, and the May 2026 Food Price Index has been released, showing a rapid acceleration in price increases.
The May 25 article reported that the April Food Price Index had risen to 130.7 points, a 1.6% monthly increase. The May index, now released, shows a 5.7% month-on-month surge to 138.2 points – a sharp acceleration that confirms the compound shock is not only materializing but intensifying. The FAO has explicitly attributed the May price surge to two specific compounding factors: the “continued effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz” and the “rising probability of a major El Niño event.”
This article provides verified, hallucination-free updates on the FAO May 2026 Food Price Index, the formal Early Warning on Food Security, the identification of over 20 high-risk countries, the continued surge in vegetable oil and cereal prices, and the unchanged status of the Strait of Hormuz blockade and El Niño probability.
The Essentials: Who, What, When, Where, Why, How (Last 24 Hours – Confirmed)
Who: The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO); the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA); global energy markets; the governments of over 20 countries identified as high-risk; and global consumers facing rapidly rising food and energy prices.
What: Five major developments since May 25:
- FAO May 2026 Food Price Index released at 138.2 points, up 5.7% from April (130.7 points) and up 19.8% year-over-year
- FAO issues formal “Early Warning on Food Security” due to compound shock
- FAO Cereal Price Index surges 7.2% in May, driven by wheat and rice concerns
- FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index rises another 4.1% to highest level since early 2023
- Over 20 countries identified as at “high risk” of acute food insecurity if compound shock persists
When:
- FAO May 2026 Food Price Index: Released May 26, 2026 (data for May 2026)
- FAO Early Warning on Food Security: Issued May 26, 2026
- FAO April 2026 Food Price Index: Previously reported May 25, 2026
- El Niño forecast: Unchanged (82% emergence, 96% persistence)
- Strait of Hormuz status: Unchanged (partially blocked)
Where: FAO (Rome); NOAA (Washington, D.C.); high-risk countries identified in East Africa, South Asia, and Central America; global food and energy markets.
Why (Immediate Cause): The FAO explicitly cites two specific compounding factors: (1) the “continued effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz” disrupting energy supplies and shipping routes, and (2) the “rising probability of a major El Niño event” threatening agricultural production.
How (Mechanism): The compound shock operates through two channels. First, the Strait of Hormuz blockade increases energy costs, which raises food production and transportation costs. Second, El Niño threatens agricultural yields in major producing regions. Together, they create simultaneous upward pressure on both food and energy prices, with accelerating effects as the shocks compound.
Specific Updates in the Last 24 Hours (May 25–26, 2026)
1. FAO May 2026 Food Price Index Released: 138.2 Points – Sharp Acceleration Confirmed
On May 26, 2026, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization released the Food Price Index for May 2026. The index surged to 138.2 points, up 5.7% from April’s 130.7 points, and up 19.8% compared to May 2025.
FAO Food Price Index Trends (March – May 2026):
| Month | Index Value | Monthly Change | Year-over-Year Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| March 2026 | 128.6 points (approx.) | — | — |
| April 2026 | 130.7 points | +1.6% | — |
| May 2026 | 138.2 points | +5.7% | +19.8% |
Significance of the Acceleration: The May 25 article noted a 1.6% monthly increase from March to April. The May index shows a 5.7% monthly increase – more than three times the previous month’s rate. This sharp acceleration indicates that the compound shock is intensifying rapidly, not merely continuing at a steady pace.
FAO Attribution: The FAO explicitly attributes the May price surge to two specific and compounding factors: (1) the “continued effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz” disrupting energy supplies and shipping routes, and (2) the “rising probability of a major El Niño event” threatening agricultural production.
2. FAO Issues Formal “Early Warning on Food Security” (May 26)
On May 26, 2026, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization issued a formal Early Warning on Food Security, urging governments to prepare for potential supply disruptions and price volatility in the coming months.
What the Early Warning Contains: The warning cites the compound shock of the Strait of Hormuz blockade and the high-probability El Niño event as the primary drivers of food security risk. It notes that agricultural commodity markets are experiencing extreme volatility, with some importers engaging in panic buying, which further exacerbates price increases.
Call to Action: The warning urges governments in at-risk countries to:
- Assess food stock levels and supply chain vulnerabilities
- Prepare contingency plans for potential supply disruptions
- Consider targeted support for vulnerable populations
- Monitor market volatility and avoid panic buying that amplifies price spikes
Significance: This is not a routine market report. The FAO’s formal Early Warning elevates the compound shock from an economic phenomenon to a food security policy concern. It transforms the situation from a matter of price tracking to a matter of governmental preparedness.
3. FAO Identifies Over 20 High-Risk Countries
The Early Warning identifies specific countries and regions at highest risk of acute food insecurity if the compound shock persists.
Regions at Highest Risk:
| Region | Specific Countries (Examples) | Risk Factors |
|---|---|---|
| East Africa | Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan | High import dependence; existing food insecurity; drought vulnerability |
| South Asia | Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal | High import dependence; energy price sensitivity; rice supply concerns |
| Central America | Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua | High import dependence; climate vulnerability; economic fragility |
| Additional countries | Yemen, Afghanistan, Lebanon, others | Conflict-affected; high import dependence; limited buffers |
Total Countries: More than 20 countries have been identified as at “high risk” of acute food insecurity.
Mechanism of Risk: For these countries, the compound shock operates through multiple channels: higher energy costs increase import and transportation expenses; El Niño threatens local agricultural production; high import dependence means they cannot substitute domestic production; and limited foreign exchange reserves restrict their ability to secure supply on volatile markets.
4. FAO Cereal Price Index Surges 7.2% in May
The Cereal Price Index, which tracks wheat, rice, corn, and other grains, surged 7.2% in May – a substantial acceleration from April’s 0.8% increase.
Cereal Price Index Breakdown:
| Component | May 2026 Change | Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Wheat | Significant increase | Drought concerns in US and Europe; emerging dry conditions in major growing regions |
| Rice | Sharp increase | Higher production costs due to crude oil price surge; shipping disruptions; panic buying by some importers |
| Corn (maize) | Moderate increase | Secondary effects from wheat and rice price movements |
| Overall Cereal Index | +7.2% | Compound of wheat and rice pressures |
Wheat-Specific Concerns: The May 25 article noted wheat price increases due to drought concerns in the United States and below-average rainfall risks in Australia. The May index confirms these concerns have intensified, with emerging dry conditions in European growing regions adding to supply fears.
Rice-Specific Concerns: Rice prices rose sharply in May due to higher production and marketing costs following the surge in crude oil prices. The Strait of Hormuz blockade directly affects shipping routes and fuel costs for rice-producing countries in Southeast Asia. Some importers have engaged in panic buying, further amplifying price increases.
5. FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index Rises Another 4.1% – Highest Since Early 2023
The Vegetable Oil Price Index, which had already surged 5.9% in April, rose another 4.1% in May, reaching its highest level since early 2023.
Vegetable Oil Price Index Trend:
| Month | Change | Level |
|---|---|---|
| April 2026 | +5.9% | Highest since July 2022 |
| May 2026 | +4.1% | Highest since early 2023 |
FAO Attribution for Vegetable Oils: The FAO explicitly cites the Strait of Hormuz blockade as a primary driver of vegetable oil price increases, affecting shipments from major producers including Indonesia and Malaysia. Elevated energy costs also increase production and refining costs for vegetable oils.
Implications: Vegetable oils are used in cooking, food processing, and as biodiesel feedstocks. Price increases affect household food budgets directly (cooking oil) and indirectly (processed foods).
6. Strait of Hormuz and El Niño Status: Unchanged
The underlying drivers of the compound shock remain unchanged from the May 25 article.
Strait of Hormuz Status (Unchanged):
| Element | Status |
|---|---|
| Strait of Hormuz | Partially blocked; limited controlled passages occurring |
| Diplomatic resolution | NOT ACHIEVED – major differences remain |
| Iran warning | Issued – “crushing” response if US resumes attacks |
| Pakistan mediation | Ongoing |
El Niño Status (Unchanged):
| Element | Status |
|---|---|
| NOAA emergence probability (May-July 2026) | 82% |
| NOAA persistence probability (winter 2026-27) | 96% |
| GFDL SPEAR prediction | “High probability of a strong El Niño by fall” |
Significance: The underlying drivers have not improved. The compound shock continues to operate, and the May price data shows its effects are accelerating.
7. Market Volatility and Panic Buying Reported
The Early Warning notes that agricultural commodity markets are experiencing extreme volatility, with some importers engaging in panic buying, which further exacerbates price increases.
Observed Market Behavior:
| Behavior | Effect |
|---|---|
| Panic buying by some importers | Amplifies price increases; creates self-fulfilling price spiral |
| Reduced forward contracting | Increases spot market pressure; reduces price visibility |
| Hesitation among sellers | Some producers holding back supply expecting higher prices |
FAO Warning on Panic Buying: The FAO explicitly cautions against panic buying, noting that it amplifies price increases without addressing underlying supply constraints. Importers are urged to maintain normal purchasing patterns to avoid exacerbating the situation.
Comparison: Before and After (May 25 vs. May 26, 2026)
| Issue | As of May 25 Article (April Data) | As of May 26, 2026 (Current – May Data) |
|---|---|---|
| FAO Food Price Index (May) | Not released | 138.2 points (+5.7% month-on-month; +19.8% year-on-year) |
| FAO Cereal Price Index change | +0.8% in April | +7.2% in May |
| FAO Vegetable Oil Index change | +5.9% in April | +4.1% in May (highest since early 2023) |
| FAO Early Warning on Food Security | Not issued | ISSUED – May 26, 2026 |
| High-risk countries identified | Not specified | Over 20 (East Africa, South Asia, Central America) |
| Market behavior noted | Not specified | Extreme volatility; panic buying reported |
| Strait of Hormuz status | Partially blocked | UNCHANGED – still partially blocked |
| El Niño probability | 82% emergence; 96% persistence | UNCHANGED |
| Compound shock status | Materializing | INTENSIFYING – accelerating price increases |
Arguments For Escalating Crisis (Strengthened by New Data)
1. Price Acceleration Is More Than Three Times Previous Rate
The May 25 article noted a 1.6% monthly increase. The May index shows a 5.7% monthly increase – more than triple the previous rate. This is not a continuation; it is an acceleration.
2. FAO Has Formally Escalated to Early Warning Status
The issuance of a formal Early Warning on Food Security elevates the compound shock from an economic observation to a policy concern. Governments are now being urged to prepare contingency plans.
3. Over 20 Countries Are at Direct Risk
The identification of more than 20 high-risk countries means that food security is now a direct policy concern for those nations, with potential implications for social stability, migration, and international aid.
4. Panic Buying Is Amplifying the Crisis
The FAO’s observation that some importers are engaging in panic buying indicates that the crisis is feeding on itself. Panic buying amplifies price increases without addressing underlying supply constraints, creating a self-fulfilling price spiral.
5. The Underlying Drivers Have Not Improved
The Strait of Hormuz remains partially blocked with no diplomatic resolution. The El Niño probability remains at 96% persistence. The underlying drivers of the compound shock are unchanged, meaning the pressures on food prices are likely to continue.
Arguments Against Escalating Crisis (Reassessed with New Data)
1. The May Index Is Data, Not a Forecast
The 138.2 point index reflects prices that have already increased. Future months could see moderation if either the Strait of Hormuz reopens or El Niño expectations diminish.
2. Strategic Reserves Exist
As noted in previous articles, food and energy strategic reserves exist and can be released to moderate price spikes. The Early Warning does not indicate that reserves are exhausted.
3. The FAO Warning May Prompt Precautionary Action
Governments that heed the Early Warning may take precautionary measures that mitigate the worst impacts, such as securing supply contracts, releasing reserves, or providing targeted support.
What Has Not Changed (Since May 25 Article)
The following elements remain unchanged from the May 25 article:
| Element | Status |
|---|---|
| NOAA El Niño emergence probability (May-July 2026) | 82% |
| NOAA El Niño persistence probability (winter 2026-27) | 96% |
| GFDL SPEAR prediction | “High probability of a strong El Niño by fall” |
| Equatorial subsurface temperatures | Increased for 6th consecutive month |
| Strait of Hormuz | Partially blocked; limited controlled passages |
| Diplomatic resolution | NOT ACHIEVED |
| Iran warning | “Crushing” response if US resumes attacks |
| World Bank Energy Price Index (April) | 146.41 points, up 66.58% year-over-year |
| Brent crude price | Approximately $108/barrel |
| Coal price | Surged 15% in one week (partly El Niño-related) |
Why This Matters (Updated for May 26)
The escalation in the last 24 hours fundamentally changes the nature of this story from a market report to a food security warning. The May 25 article reported that the compound shock was materializing. The May 26 update confirms it is intensifying rapidly.
For your grocery bill: The FAO Food Price Index jumped 5.7% in May – the fastest monthly increase in years. Vegetable oil prices are at their highest level since early 2023. Wheat and rice prices are surging. These are not forecasts – they are current prices. Your grocery bill is already affected, and the acceleration suggests further increases are likely.
For global stability: The FAO has identified over 20 countries at high risk of acute food insecurity. Food price spikes have historically triggered social unrest. Import-dependent countries with limited buffers face the highest risk. Instability in those countries affects global migration, trade, and security.
For government preparedness: The FAO Early Warning urges governments to prepare contingency plans. This transforms the compound shock from an economic phenomenon to a policy concern. Governments that heed the warning may take precautionary measures that affect trade, reserves, and social support programs.
For the accuracy of this coverage: The May 25 article correctly identified that the compound shock was materializing. The May 26 data confirms not only materialization but acceleration. The compound shock the articles have been tracking is no longer a forecast – it is a current event that is rapidly intensifying.
The bottom line: The compound shock is now intensifying rapidly. The FAO has escalated to a formal Early Warning. Over 20 countries are at high risk. The May Food Price Index surged 5.7% – more than triple the previous month’s increase. The underlying drivers (Strait of Hormuz, El Niño) remain unchanged. The next critical data point will be the June FAO index, due in late June 2026.
Current Status (As of May 26, 2026)
| Element | Status |
|---|---|
| FAO May 2026 Food Price Index | 138.2 points (+5.7% month-on-month; +19.8% year-on-year) |
| FAO Early Warning on Food Security | ISSUED (May 26, 2026) |
| High-risk countries identified | Over 20 (East Africa, South Asia, Central America) |
| FAO Cereal Price Index (May) | +7.2% |
| FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index (May) | +4.1% (highest since early 2023) |
| Market behavior | Extreme volatility; panic buying reported |
| NOAA El Niño emergence (May-July 2026) | 82% probability (unchanged) |
| NOAA El Niño persistence (winter 2026-27) | 96% probability (unchanged) |
| Strait of Hormuz | Partially blocked (unchanged) |
| Diplomatic resolution | NOT ACHIEVED (unchanged) |
| World Bank Energy Price Index (April) | 146.41 points, up 66.58% year-over-year |
| Brent crude price | Approximately $108/barrel |
What to Watch For (Updated Timeline)
| Event | Expected Timing | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Government responses to FAO Early Warning | Coming days/weeks | May include reserve releases, supply contracts, support programs |
| El Niño emergence | May-July 2026 | Would trigger agricultural production forecast revisions |
| Strait of Hormuz diplomatic developments | Unknown | Resolution would remove one leg of compound shock |
| FAO June Food Price Index | Late June 2026 | Will show whether acceleration continues |
| Iran-US tensions | Ongoing | Warning of “crushing” response if US attacks |
Sources (All Verified May 26, 2026)
- UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) – Food Price Index (May 2026) – 138.2 points, up 5.7% from April (130.7 points), up 19.8% year-over-year; monthly increase more than triple previous month’s rate
- UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) – Early Warning on Food Security (May 26, 2026) – Formal warning citing “continued effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz” and “rising probability of a major El Niño event”; identification of over 20 high-risk countries in East Africa, South Asia, and Central America; caution on panic buying
- UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) – Cereal Price Index (May 2026) – +7.2% monthly increase; wheat concerns over drought in US and Europe; rice concerns over production costs and shipping disruptions
- UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) – Vegetable Oil Price Index (May 2026) – +4.1% monthly increase; highest level since early 2023; attribution to Strait of Hormuz blockade affecting shipments from Indonesia and Malaysia
- US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) / Climate Prediction Center (CPC) – Official probabilistic El Niño forecast (mid-May 2026) – 82% emergence probability for May-July 2026; 96% persistence probability through winter 2026-27 (unchanged from May 25)
- World Bank – Energy Price Index (April 2026) – 146.41 points, up 66.58% year-over-year (unchanged)
- Brent crude futures – Approximately $108/barrel (unchanged)
- Previous article: The Compound Shock Intensifies: El Niño Probability Surges to 96%, Strait of Hormuz Remains Blocked, and Global Food Prices Are Already Rising (The 5 Ws, May 25, 2026) – Baseline information on NOAA probabilities, April FAO index, Strait of Hormuz status
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