Thomas Lamb · June 8, 2026 · Research: Claude / Anthropic
How Earth's own magma system is driving the climate crisis — and why the convergence of a Super El Niño, a global fertilizer collapse, and an active Ring of Fire may be the most dangerous moment of our lifetime.
EL NIÑO ANOMALY FORECAST · +3°C
PEOPLE IN CRISIS HUNGER · 318 MILLION
Chapter I — The Warning Nobody Answered
A question asked in 2004. Still unanswered.
In March 2004, I published a paper arguing something the climate establishment found inconvenient: that the greatest concentration of volcanic and hydrothermal activity on Earth sits directly beneath the ocean region showing the most persistent sea surface temperature anomaly in the modern record. I asked whether that was coincidence. No serious answer came back.
Twenty-two years later, on June 8 2026, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck off Mindanao in the southern Philippines, killing dozens, triggering a tsunami, and sending aftershocks through the same tectonic system I had been writing about. On the same day, a forecast map from NMME showed the western Pacific warm pool — the heat source for all of Asia's rainfall — draining eastward in what may become the strongest El Niño in recorded history. Tambora is stirring. Mount Lewotobi sent ash 18 kilometres into the sky last year. Ibu recorded 145 explosions in a single reporting period.
The question I asked in 2004 is no longer abstract. It has casualties.
"The greatest concentration of volcanic activity on Earth sits directly beneath the ocean region showing the most persistent temperature anomaly in the current global record. That is not a coincidence to be waved away."
What follows is the full argument — the science, the food crisis, the geopolitics — assembled from the evidence of 2026 and the framework laid down twenty-two years ago.
Chapter II — The Source of the Heat
The ocean has a furnace underneath it.
The conventional explanation for warming seas focuses entirely on the top: solar radiation trapped by atmospheric greenhouse gases heats the ocean surface downward. This is real. It is also incomplete.
The western Pacific warm pool — the body of water centred on Indonesia and the Philippines, the warmest sustained patch of ocean on Earth — sits directly above the most tectonically violent convergence zone on the planet. Multiple subduction zones meet here. Hundreds of underwater volcanoes, many unmapped, punctuate the seafloor. Hydrothermal vent fields leak superheated mineral-rich water continuously. Magma chambers sit closer to the seafloor here than almost anywhere else on Earth.
Recent research has established that geothermal forcing accounts for nearly 20% of overall global ocean warming over the past two decades — a figure almost never mentioned in mainstream climate discourse. Seafloor geothermal heating warms bottom waters, decreases water column stability, and drives upward mixing. The heat doesn't pool on the seafloor. It rises.
The Heat Chain — Bottom Up
▸ Earth's mantle generates heat through radioactive decay and residual planetary formation energy
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▸ Magma activity intensifies along the Ring of Fire — subduction zones, hydrothermal vents, submarine volcanoes
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▸ Deep and bottom waters warm; column stability decreases; heat mixes upward
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▸ Western Pacific warm pool accumulates heat — from below and above simultaneously
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▸ Trade winds pile warm surface water further westward for years — the fuel tank fills
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▸ Warmer oceans outgas more CO₂ into atmosphere — warming amplifies
The Indo-Pacific warm pool has nearly doubled in size since 1900. Climate science attributes this to greenhouse gases. The attribution may be partially correct — and also partially inverted. Warmer oceans release more dissolved CO₂. If the ocean is warming partly from below, CO₂ rise is as much symptom as cause.
This does not absolve fossil fuel emissions. It means we are likely dealing with two compounding drivers, and we have been modelling only one of them.
Chapter III — The Theft
Indonesia built the heat. El Niño steals it.
In April 2026, a pair of cyclones straddling the equator caused the trade winds to briefly reverse direction. This triggered a downwelling Kelvin wave — a pulse of subsurface energy moving eastward along the equator, carrying ocean temperatures reaching 7.5°C above average in the deep ocean. A freight train of heat, rolling from the western Pacific toward South America.
The Kelvin wave deepens the warm layer and shuts down cold upwelling off the South American coast. Sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific surge. The NMME forecast map for July 2026 shows the result in vivid orange-red: a blazing stripe of anomalous warmth crossing the entire equatorial Pacific, while the western Pacific — where Indonesia and the Philippines sit — shows near-normal or slightly cooled tones.
This is the mechanism. The western Pacific warm pool, fed for years by trade winds and geothermal heat from below, is drained eastward in months. The countries that generated the heat are left with cooler local seas, suppressed convection, reduced rainfall, drought, and wildfire risk.
Indonesia and the Philippines are funding the event that harms them most. The warm pool is their inheritance. El Niño is the repossession.
ECMWF, NOAA, and BOM models now align on a trajectory that could exceed +3°C anomaly — potentially surpassing the record-breaking El Niño of 1877–78. That event killed an estimated 50 million people, almost entirely through famine.
Chapter IV — The Broken Table
318 million hungry. Before El Niño arrives.
On February 28 2026, maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz collapsed by nearly 97% following military escalation in the Middle East. Half the world's seaborne sulphur supply — a critical input for converting phosphate rock into usable fertilizer — passed through that strait. So did vast quantities of urea, ammonia, and LNG feedstock for nitrogen production.
Within weeks, urea prices jumped 46%. Anhydrous ammonia breached $900 per tonne. The CEO of Yara, the world's largest fertilizer company, warned that approximately 500,000 tonnes of nitrogen fertilizer was no longer being produced globally — and that the crisis could eliminate 10 billion meals per week if conditions persisted. Reduced nitrogen application can compress yields for intensive crops by as much as 50% within a single growing season.
Convergence — June 8, 2026
▸ 318 million people in crisis-level hunger — before El Niño peaks
▸ Fertilizer prices up 80% year-on-year
▸ Rice output forecast to fall 20–50% across South and East Asia
▸ Wildfires have burned 150 million hectares globally — double the 2024 rate
▸ Two simultaneous confirmed famines: Gaza and Sudan
▸ Drought covers 61% of the US lower 48
▸ Magnitude 7.8 earthquake strikes Mindanao — today
These are not separate crises. They are the same system expressing itself through different channels simultaneously: tectonic, oceanic, atmospheric, geopolitical. The seafloor that generates the western Pacific's heat also produced today's 7.8 earthquake. The same trade routes broken by conflict also carry the fertilizer that was supposed to offset El Niño's effect on crop yields.
Chapter V — The Geological Record
The Earth has caused extinctions before.
The Arctic was once lush with tropical vegetation. Palm trees, crocodiles, and dense forests existed at high latitudes during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, 56 million years ago. CO₂ was high then too. There were no industrial humans.
The Permian extinction, 252 million years ago — the worst in Earth's history, eliminating 96% of marine species and 70% of land vertebrates — is now largely attributed to the Siberian Traps: a sustained volcanic event that flooded the atmosphere with CO₂ and sulphur dioxide from magma over tens of thousands of years. The end-Cretaceous event had volcanic precursors in the Deccan Traps before the asteroid arrived. The Paleocene-Eocene event was likely triggered by massive seafloor methane release driven by volcanic heating from below.
The pattern is consistent across deep time: magma intensifies, ocean heat rises, CO₂ outgasses, temperatures spike, ecosystems collapse faster than species can adapt.
What makes the present moment different is not the mechanism. It is the speed — and the population. Natural extinction-level volcanic episodes unfolded over millennia. Species migrated. Some adapted. Eight billion people cannot migrate at geological speed. Food systems that took centuries to build can collapse in a single growing season.
Chapter VI — The Way Forward
You cannot turn down the Earth's thermostat. But you can prepare.
The hard implication of this framework is that carbon reduction policies — however beneficial for other reasons — will not stop what is already in motion. If Earth's internal systems are a primary driver being systematically excluded from our models, then every solution built on that incomplete model is also incomplete.
This does not mean we are helpless. It means the response must be honest about what we are actually facing.
Immediately: Emergency food stockpiling before El Niño peaks. Redirecting available fertilizer to highest-yield regions first. Activating drought-resistant seed programs in Indonesia and the Philippines before planting windows close. Rice, maize, and wheat varieties with deeper root systems and efficient water-use mechanisms exist now and can be deployed now.
Medium term: Bio-fertilizers harnessing beneficial plant-microbe interactions can reduce dependence on synthetic supply chains now broken by conflict. Indigenous food systems in the Maritime Continent — which fed these populations long before synthetic inputs existed — deserve serious reinvestment, not as nostalgia but as resilience infrastructure.
Structurally: Fertilizer must be treated as strategic national infrastructure. The Hormuz lesson must not be forgotten when the conflict ends. And climate science must integrate volcanology, deep oceanography, and atmospheric modelling into a single honest system — rather than the siloed disciplines that missed this convergence for twenty-two years.
The ocean has a furnace underneath it. We have been watching only the smoke. It is time to look at the fire.
The question I asked in 2004 was never answered. In 2026, the data is answering it for us — in earthquakes, in draining warm pools, in failed harvests, in famine. The answer is not comfortable. It never was. But an honest diagnosis is the only foundation on which a real response can be built.
Afterword
On the record
This report was written on June 8 2026 — the day a 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck the Philippines, the day NMME published its July 2026 sea surface temperature anomaly forecast, and the day the FAO's warnings about Southeast Asian food insecurity came into sharpest focus. The convergence of events on a single day is not the argument. It is the illustration of an argument that has been available for twenty-two years.
The geological record does not care about our models. It continues regardless. The question is whether we choose to read it honestly, or wait for it to read itself to us.
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE: CLAUDE, ANTHROPIC
ORIGINAL FRAMEWORK: CLIMATE SCIENCE REVISITED, MARCH 2004
