According to supplychaindigital.com, Saskia van Gendt, Chief Sustainability Officer at Blue Yonder, warns that viral social media trends—like the Dubai chocolate phenomenon—are triggering acute agricultural supply chain disruptions, with pistachio prices surging 35% from $7.65 to $10.30 per pound within one year.
Viral Trends and Agricultural Supply Shocks
The Dubai chocolate trend created an overnight global demand spike for pistachios—key ingredients in the confection—outpacing agricultural production capacity. As a result, Iran’s pistachio exports to the UAE rose by 40% in the six months ending March 2025, compared to the prior year. This surge exposed critical inflexibility in traditional agricultural supply chains, which cannot scale rapidly enough to meet digitally amplified consumer demand. According to van Gendt, such volatility pressures ingredient availability, inflates prices, and introduces integrity risks—including compromised product quality and eroded consumer trust.
Climate, Geopolitics, and Fertiliser Shortages Converge
Beyond social media–driven demand, multiple overlapping risks are straining agricultural sourcing. A Super El Niño event—combined with ongoing conflict in the Middle East—is creating a multiplier effect on food supply chains. Reduced fertiliser availability during the planting season is already pressuring production of pistachios, wheat, rice, and corn. These crops serve dual roles as human food and animal feed, meaning shortages will ripple across both retail and processed food sectors. The World Economic Forum projects fertiliser shortages will take six months to one year to fully manifest in food supply—and ultimately in retail pricing.
Physical Logistics Under Climate Stress
El Niño’s physical impacts extend beyond crop yields. Intense rainfall and flooding are delaying transit and inflating shipping costs in some regions, while severe droughts restrict navigable waterways elsewhere. Van Gendt cites the Panama Canal as precedent: low water levels during the 2023–2024 El Niño cycle severely constrained passage. Meanwhile, West Africa—the world’s largest cocoa-producing region—is bracing for soaring temperatures and diminished rainfall, further threatening an industry already weakened by climate shifts and disease.
End-to-End Visibility and AI-Driven Resilience
To counter these cascading disruptions, van Gendt stresses that supply chains must shift from reactive to proactive risk management. End-to-end visibility, unified data, and practical AI enable rapid, scalable decision-making. Blue Yonder’s 2026 Supply Chain Compass Report, based on a survey of approximately 700 global supply chain leaders, found that 51% of organizations have already deployed a unified data platform—the most widely adopted new technology in the sector. Such integration replaces siloed guesswork with real-time, data-driven insights, allowing businesses to anticipate bottlenecks before they escalate.
Speed Imperative: Minutes, Not Weeks
Van Gendt underscores a fundamental shift in response time expectations: “In today’s hyper-volatile global climate, supply chains must be able to react to major shocks within minutes to hours rather than days or weeks.” She notes that a single week of indecision translates directly into lost revenue, broken contracts, and damaged customer trust. To achieve this velocity, she advocates moving beyond legacy systems toward agentic AI solutions—capable of autonomous adaptation—that enhance resilience without sacrificing operational control.
“Viral social media trends such as Dubai chocolate can create sudden spikes in global demand that move significantly faster than agricultural production can respond.” — Saskia van Gendt, Chief Sustainability Officer at Blue Yonder
Source: supplychaindigital.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










