Developing El Niño points to stronger solar conditions across Australasia and South Asia

April 24, 2026 at 11:28 AM
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Summary

In a new weekly update for <b>pv magazine</b>, Solcast, a DNV company, provides a June–August 2026 outlook indicating mostly neutral to positive solar irradiance globally, with stronger gains in regions like Australasia, South Asia, West Africa, and Central America—patterns consistent with a developing El Niño. Negative anomalies are limited and mostly early-season, while Europe and the U.S. show modest or mixed signals, with improvements or neutrality dominating as the season progresses.

<p class="p1"><span class="s1">In a new weekly update for <b>pv magazine</b>, Solcast, a DNV company, provides a June–August 2026 outlook indicating mostly neutral to positive solar irradiance globally, with stronger gains in regions like Australasia, South Asia, West Africa, and Central America—patterns consistent with a developing El Niño. Negative anomalies are limited and mostly early-season, while Europe and the U.S. show modest or mixed signals, with improvements or neutrality dominating as the season progresses.</span></p><p>The June, July and August 2026 seasonal outlook points to broadly neutral to positive solar irradiance conditions across many key solar regions, with several coherent regional signals consistent with a developing El Niño, according to analysis using the <a href="https://solcast.com/?utm_source=pvmag&amp;utm_medium=Content&amp;utm_campaign=ghimap" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Solcast API</a>. The strongest positive anomalies are concentrated across the Maritime Continent and Australasia, parts of South Asia later in the season, the Sahel and parts of West Africa, and Central America by August. Europe trends neutral to modestly positive overall. Negative anomalies are concentrated mainly in early-season monsoon regions, but in several cases weaken or reverse as the season progresses.</p>
<p><img alt="" class="size-medium wp-image-339996 aligncenter" height="452" src="https://www.pv-magazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Global-GHI-anomaly-JJA-2026-forecast-Global-600x452.png" tabindex="0" width="600" /></p>
<p>Across the Maritime Continent and Australasia, the outlook shows a clear progression towards higher-than-average irradiance through the three-month period. Conditions in June are already slightly positive compared to the long-term average, but positive anomalies strengthen in July and become more pronounced in August, with parts of Malaysia, Indonesia, northern Australia and the Coral Sea approaching 20% above average. This pattern is consistent with reduced cloudiness across the region, a familiar early signal of developing El Niño conditions. For solar assets, it points to a generally favourable winter period in Australia and surrounding markets, even though the signal remains relatively mild at the start of the season.</p>
<p><img alt="" class="size-medium wp-image-339999 aligncenter" height="326" src="https://www.pv-magazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Global-GHI-anomaly-JJA-2026-forecast-Australia-600x326.png" tabindex="0" width="600" /></p>
<p>In South Asia, the seasonal anomaly signal evolves more sharply. June is forecast to be cloudier across India, as the summer monsoon typically brings around this time, leaving irradiance near normal or slightly below average. By July and August, however, that pattern reverses, with clearer conditions emerging over large parts of India and Pakistan. August shows the strongest positive anomalies, in some areas approaching 20% above the long- term average. A similar suppression of cloud cover is evident across the Sahel and parts of West Africa, where above-average irradiance persists through much of the season. In both regions, the pattern has been linked to weaker monsoon activity, that can occur during the El Niño development.</p>
<p><img alt="" class="size-medium wp-image-340000 aligncenter" height="368" src="https://www.pv-magazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Global-GHI-anomaly-JJA-2026-forecast-Africa-600x368.png" tabindex="0" width="600" /></p>
<p>Europe presents a quieter but still constructive signal. June shows mild positive anomalies over the Iberian Peninsula and parts of eastern Europe, while southern Europe and the UK remain close to average. In July and August, positive anomalies broaden across much of the continent, extending from France through central and eastern Europe, with most areas forecast to sit around 5% to 10% above average. There are still pockets of neutrality and slight weakness, particularly around the UK and parts of southern Europe early in the period, but no large, persistent negative signal dominates the European outlook.</p>
<p><img alt="" class="size-medium wp-image-340001 aligncenter" height="282" src="https://www.pv-magazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Global-GHI-anomaly-JJA-2026-forecast-Europe-600x282.png" tabindex="0" width="600" /></p>
<p>In the Americas, Central America stands out for its late-season shift. June begins with below-average irradiance, but conditions are forecast to improve quickly, turning positive in July and strengthening further by August, when anomalies approach 20% above average. This is again broadly consistent with an El Niño backdrop. The United States shows a weaker and more mixed signal. The south-east trends slightly positive, while the south- west may see a slight uplift later in the season. By contrast, the Pacific North-West leans slightly negative, suggesting more persistent cloud cover and little sign of a strong seasonal signal for utility-scale solar in the country’s main south-western markets.</p>
<p><img alt="" class="size-medium wp-image-340003 aligncenter" height="297" src="https://www.pv-magazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Global-GHI-anomaly-JJA-2026-forecast-North-America-600x297.png" tabindex="0" width="600" /></p>
<p><em><a href="https://solcast.com/?utm_source=pvmag&amp;utm_medium=Content&amp;utm_campaign=ghimap" rel="noopener" target="_blank">Solcast</a> produces these figures by tracking clouds and aerosols at 1-2km resolution globally, using satellite data and proprietary <a href="https://solcast.com/irradiance-data-methodology/?utm_source=pvmag&amp;utm_medium=Content&amp;utm_campaign=ghimap" rel="noopener" target="_blank">AI/ML algorithms</a>. This data is used to drive irradiance models, enabling Solcast to calculate irradiance at high resolution, with typical bias of less than 2%, and also cloud-tracking forecasts. This data is used by more than 350 companies managing over 300 GW of solar assets globally.</em></p>

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