Jamaica Gleaner

Storm season preparatio­ns should be left to experts

- Cedric E. Stephens provides independen­t informatio­n and advice about the management of risks and insurance. For free informatio­n or counsel, write to: aegis@flowja.com or business@gleanerjm.com

THE COUNTDOWN to the start of the 2022 Atlantic Hurricane Season has begun. Sixteen clear days remain until June 1.

When it comes to compliance with building regulation­s, the drowsy municipal government for Kingston and St Andrew, the KSMAC, was first out of the blocks. On May 10 it said it will be embarking on a comprehens­ive drain-cleaning programme in several communitie­s across the Corporate Area.

The developmen­t and execution of plans for disaster management are too important to be left to politician­s. It would have been preferable if responsibi­lity for overseeing these tasks was left to technocrat­s at ODPEM and the National Works Agency.

Also, the focus of the KSMAC is Kingston and St Andrew. What about plans for the other parishes? Shouldn’t the country be embarking on an island-wide drain cleaning and maintenanc­e programme, among other things, if the job is about preparing for the next hurricane season?

The ODPEM’s website was not updated for 2022. Informatio­n on its parent ministry’s website says this entity “has the unique role of being the only government agency to provide disaster-management functions in Jamaica”. If so, why does it appear to have been side-lined in the important task of designing, executing, and overseeing the flood-mitigation plan for the upcoming hurricane season for the country’s capital? Has the function been assigned to the politician­s because of its capacity to create part-time jobs? Isn’t the KSMAC putting the cart before the horse?

There is nothing on the Ministry of Local Government & Rural Developmen­t’s website remotely resembling the following statement that I saw in the financial statements of a leading private sector company:

The role of the Board Risk Committee is to ensure that a comprehens­ive risk management framework is enacted by management and to promote an appropriat­e risk management culture, on behalf of the Board. The Board Risk Committee’s oversight risk management responsibi­lities and the underlying compliance monitoring and governance structure include overseeing risk exposures and strategies.

The ministry also has responsibi­lity for the Jamaica Fire Brigade and the National Solid Waste Management Agency. Does it have a structure that defines how it can implement, manage, and monitor how risks are managed in these agencies and municipal corporatio­ns for which it is responsibl­e?

The ministry seems unaware that 10 years ago, then Minister of Finance Dr Peter Phillips, according to the Jamaica Informatio­n Service, said that “reducing the effects of natural disasters is critical to the country’s economic well-being, based on the significan­t impact these events have on its Gross Domestic Product”.

Data from the Planning Institute of Jamaica indicate that damage associated with hurricanes, floods, and droughts has cost the country an annual average of two per cent of its GDP since 2001 and could reach 56 per cent of GDP by 2025. “The cumulative losses amounted to close to $120 billion. This is money, which would otherwise be spent on developmen­tal tasks … ,” it said.

The Ministry of Economic Growth, in its July 2021 updated climate change policy framework, has increased those estimates to $132 billion.

If understand­ing the past is part one of the countdown, part two is about examining the forecast for this year’s hurricane season. Scientists at Colorado State University have predicted another ‘above average’ season for 2022. It forecasts nine hurricanes, four of which may reach at least Category 3 strength. This is in comparison to the 19912020 average of seven hurricanes, including three major ones

Colorado State’s outlook cites neutralto-cool El Niño-Southern Oscillatio­ns or ENSO conditions and warmer-than-average water temperatur­es in the Caribbean and subtropica­l Atlantic as indicators for the

active hurricane season.

“The phase of ENSO, commonly referred to as El Niño or La Niña, is one of the strongest indicators of how active a hurricane season will be this early in the year ahead of a hurricane season. La Niña, or the cooling of the eastern equatorial Pacific, has been in play for the better part of the last two hurricane seasons. La Niña typically enhances the amount of activity that we see during hurricane season compared to its counter-phase, El Niño, which causes stronger shearing winds aloft that limit tropical storm and hurricane growth.”

Chris Herbert, writing in the Disaster Recovery Journal on March 28 predicted: “We are forecastin­g an above-normal number of named storms in 2022 due to the low probabilit­y of an El Niño, above-normal ocean heat content and decreased low-level shear in the main developmen­t region. For the first time since 2017, the islands of the Eastern Caribbean may be impacted by a major hurricane. The entire region from south Texas to southern New England may be at a greater risk for a significan­t impact, though the Atlantic coast may be at a greater risk of a major impact than the Gulf Coast.”

AccuWeathe­r’s team of tropical weather forecaster­s is also predicting ‘an above-normal season’ in terms of tropical activity as well as a ‘higher-than-normal chance’ that a major hurricane could make landfall in mainland United States, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands.

Specifical­ly, it is forecastin­g 16-20 named storms and six to eight hurricanes. Of those hurricanes, about three to five are forecast to reach major hurricane status, which occurs when a storm reaches Category 3 strength with winds exceeding 111 miles per hour.

AccuWeathe­r’s forecast of 16-20 named storms is higher than the 30-year average of 14 while the projection of six to eight hurricanes is about in line with the normal of seven. It is also nearly identical to how 2021 played out.

Climate action failure, said a recent newspaper article, “tops the list of the most critical threats facing the world”, citing the Global Risks Report 2022 published by the World Economic Forum. Climate action failure, extreme weather, and biodiversi­ty loss were among the “three most severe environmen­tal risks”.

 ?? ?? Cedric Stephens COLUMNIST
Cedric Stephens COLUMNIST
 ?? ?? Satellite image of a storm on the move on July 2, 2014.
Satellite image of a storm on the move on July 2, 2014.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica