The Mercury News

Hawaiian flooding linked to warming

- By Heidi Chang Los Angeles Times

Since the 1940s, the Hawaiian island of Kauai has endured two tsunamis and two hurricanes, but locals say they have never experience­d anything like the thundersto­rm that drenched the island this month.

“The rain gauge in Hanalei broke at 28 inches within 24 hours,” state Rep. Nadine Nakamura of the

North Shore community said. “In a neighborin­g valley, their rain gauge showed 44 inches within 24 hours. It’s off the charts.”

Actually, it was even worse. This week the National Weather Service said nearly 50 inches of rain fell in 24 hours.

Now, as Kauai continues to recover, scientists warn that this deluge on April 14 and 15 was something new: The first major storm in Hawaii linked to climate change.

“The flooding on Kauai is consistent with an extreme rainfall that comes with a warmer atmosphere,” said Chip Fletcher, a leading expert on the impact of climate change on Pacific island communitie­s.

He said that the intense rainfall not only triggered landslides, it also caused the Hanalei River to flood and carve a new path through Hanalei. Homes, cars and animals were swept away in raging waters, but no residents or visitors died. Some were airlifted to safety or rescued by boat.

Members of a bison herd were displaced or carried off by floodwater­s, and some were rescued from the ocean after swimming for their lives.

“Poor buffalo,” said Sue Kanoho, executive director of the Kauai Visitors Bureau, who saw video and photos of the animals roaming around businesses and neighborho­ods.

The picturesqu­e North Shore communitie­s of Wainiha and Haena are considered the hardest-hit because the only road that leads to them, Kuhio Highway, is blocked by landslides. Officials said it may not fully reopen for months.

So what can we expect in the future?

“Just recognize that we’re moving into a new climate and our communitie­s are scaled and built for a climate that no longer exists,” said Fletcher, a professor of geology and geophysics at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.

Kawika Winter, a natural resource manager, put the storm in perspectiv­e.

“This is the most severe rain event (in Hawaii) that we know about since records started being kept in 1905,” Winter said as he was about to catch a boat from Hanalei to join recovery efforts in Haena. “We’re the most remote community on the North Shore, which

is why being cut off is extremely devastatin­g.”

Winter is involved in research on climate change and community resilience, the ways places recover from unexpected and catastroph­ic events.

“In the Pacific Islands, we don’t have the luxury of debating whether climate change is real,” he said. “Climate change is affecting us, and has been for some time. There are striking similariti­es with the flooding that we experience­d on Kauai and the recent flooding in California. The warmer atmosphere is holding more moisture and that builds up until it meets with cold dry air, creating this massive unstable system, which causes what some meteorolog­ists are now referring to as a ‘rain bomb.’”

This week, a study published in the scientific journal Nature Climate Change said that California can expect more volatile weather — swinging from dry to wet years — because of humancause­d climate change.

For about a week after the storm, the normally aquamarine ocean around the island was an eerie orange; a sign of the volcanic soil. The more iron in the lava, the more orange the soil, said Dolan Eversole, a coastal geologist with the University of Hawaii Sea College Grant Program.

Since Kauai is the oldest of the Hawaiian Islands, the mountains are exceptiona­lly steep and the distance between the mountain tops, where it rained, and the sea is relatively short. There was no time for the red-orange clay to settle as water raced out to sea, he said.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency and state and county officials on Kauai are still assessing the damage to homes, infrastruc­ture and businesses.

“People are struggling because they’re cut off from their friends and family and jobs. That’s heartbreak­ing,” Nakamura said.

Among the places cut off by landslides is the Limahuli Garden and Preserve in Haena, one of the economic engines in the area. The botanical garden and nature preserve is set within Limahuli Valley, which attracts locals and visitors from around the world. But it has shut down and is not expected to reopen for months.

Flooding has destroyed parts of the garden.

“It was damaging, but not catastroph­ic. We can recover,” said Winter, director of the garden and preserve. “However, the nature preserve

is home to dozens of critically endangered plants and birds. We’re still assessing the damage to those species.”

Limahuli is one of the last places where you can see how native Hawaiians traditiona­lly managed community resources from the mountains to the sea and continue to perpetuate those practices today.

The valley also was a setting for “South Pacific,” with the sacred mountain Makana, towering over the valley, serving as “Bali Hai” in the movie. And remember the scene in “Jurassic Park” when a cow was lowered into a pen to feed the velocirapt­ors? It was also filmed there.

One of the community leaders in Haena is Presley Wann, who also has been helping with relief efforts.

“I’m amazed nobody was killed,” Wann said. “There’s so much to do now. It’s overwhelmi­ng.”

Wann’s family owns ancestral lands in Haena, which is surrounded by property owned by celebritie­s, including Julia Roberts, Bette Midler and the family of the late Glenn Frey.

Mark Zuckerberg and Pierre Omidyar also have landholdin­gs on the North Shore. Zuckerberg has pledged $1 million to help the island recover. Omidyar donated $100,000 to establish the Kauai Relief and Recovery Fund through the Hawaii Community Foundation.

Kauai has weathered a lot over the years. It survived the 1946 tsunami, which damaged all the islands. Another tsunami in 1957 hit Kauai with waves up to 52 feet high.

When Hurricane Iwa swept the Garden Island in 1982 it did about $250 million in damage.

In 1992, Hurricane Iniki, the most powerful to strike the islands in recorded history, killed six people on Kauai, and damaged or destroyed more than 14,000 homes. Damage totaled $3 billion.

“People have been describing this latest storm as a 100-year-flood,” Winter said. “But it’s more likely that the next one is just a few years off, given the reality of climate change.

“When natural disasters hit, communitie­s have to fend for themselves. Since several generation­s have recovered over the years, it helps to build resilience in the community. And now, how it rebuilds, could be an example for others.”

 ?? COUNTY OF KAUAU VIA AP ?? Officials survey damage on April 19 from a recent storm on Kauai island, Hawaii.
COUNTY OF KAUAU VIA AP Officials survey damage on April 19 from a recent storm on Kauai island, Hawaii.
 ?? PETTY OFFICER 3RD CLASS BRANDON VERDURA — U.S. COAST GUARD VIA AP ?? Flooding is visible along Kauai’s Hanalei Bay, Hawaii, on April 15. Scientists say the flooding resulted from the first major storm on the islands linked to climate change.
PETTY OFFICER 3RD CLASS BRANDON VERDURA — U.S. COAST GUARD VIA AP Flooding is visible along Kauai’s Hanalei Bay, Hawaii, on April 15. Scientists say the flooding resulted from the first major storm on the islands linked to climate change.

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