Jamaica Gleaner

Sahara dust blankets Caribbean, air quality hazardous

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SAN JUAN (AP):

A VAST cloud of Sahara dust is blanketing the Caribbean as it heads to the US with a size and concentrat­ion that experts say that haven’t been seen in half a century.

Air quality across most of the region fell to record “hazardous” levels, and experts, who nicknamed the event the ‘Godzilla dust cloud’, warned people to stay indoors and use air filters if they have one.

“This is the most significan­t event in the past 50 years,” said Pablo Méndez Lázaro, an environmen­tal health specialist with the University of Puerto Rico. “Conditions are dangerous in many Caribbean islands.”

Many health specialist­s were concerned about those battling respirator­y symptoms tied to COVID-19. Lázaro, who is working with NASA to develop an alert system for the arrival of Sahara dust, said the concentrat­ion was so high in recent days that it could even have adverse effects on healthy people.

Extremely hazy conditions and limited visibility were reported from Antigua down to Trinidad & Tobago, with the event expected to last until late Tuesday. Some people posted pictures of themselves on social media wearing double masks to ward off the coronaviru­s and the dust, while others joked that the Caribbean looked like it had received a yellow filter movie treatment.

José Alamo, a meteorolog­ist with the US National Weather Service in San Juan, Puerto Rico, said the worst days for the US territory would be Monday and Tuesday as the plume travels towards the US southeast coast. The main internatio­nal airport in San Juan was reporting only five miles (eight kilometres) of visibility.

The mass of extremely dry and dusty air, known as the Saharan Air Layer, forms over the Sahara Desert and moves across the North Atlantic every three to five days from late spring to early fall, peaking in late June to mid-August, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. It can occupy a roughly two-mile-thick layer in the atmosphere, the agency said.

Alamo said a small tropical wave headed to the Caribbean was expected to alleviate conditions by Thursday.

 ?? AP ?? This satellite photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion shows a cloud of dust coming from the Sahara Desert and arriving in the Caribbean on Monday, June 22.
AP This satellite photo provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion shows a cloud of dust coming from the Sahara Desert and arriving in the Caribbean on Monday, June 22.

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