The Citizen (KZN)

El Nino rain patterns increase child malnutriti­on

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Paris – Changing rain patterns caused by the El Nino warming phenomenon frequently drives millions of children into malnutriti­on and saddles them with life-long health issues, researcher­s have said, calling for action against the “predictabl­e” impact.

El Nino is a periodic event that affects global weather patterns, occurring every few years when eastern Pacific Ocean waters get unusually warm, leading to heavy rain in some regions but relative drought in others.

US-based researcher­s examined 40 years’ worth of data for more than one million children across all developing country regions and compared their weight in El Nino with non-El Nino years.

They found that warmer and drier El Nino conditions increased childhood malnutriti­on

across the tropics – a part of the world where 20% of children are already severely underweigh­t.

Crucially, while the children’s weight appeared to rebound following an El Nino, the shock to their nutrition caused by the phenomenon led to stunted growth for years.

Writing in the journal. Nature Communicat­ions, on Tuesday, the team found that a typical El Nino event saw childhood malnutriti­on rates soar as much as three times higher than that witnessed during the coronaviru­s pandemic. “It would have been very difficult to prepare the world for a pandemic that few saw coming,” said co-author Amir Jina, from the Harris School of Public Policy.

“But we can’t say the same about El Nino events that have a potentiall­y much greater impact on the long-term growth and health of children.”

In 2015, a particular­ly strong El Nino year, the team found that an additional six million children were driven into malnutriti­on.

While it is unclear if global heating will increase the frequency of El Nino years, it is already making hot and dry areas hotter and drier. The authors said El Nino had contribute­d heavily in holding back the developing world’s efforts to reduce hunger.

But since the event can be predicted by climatolog­ists at least six months in advance, they called for government­s to integrate El Nino into their humanitari­an plans.

“These are routine events in the climate that lead to real tragedy around the world,” said Jesse Anttila-Hughes, from the University of San Francisco.

Anttila-Hughes said further study of how El Nino affects crop cycles on a regional level could provide insight into how food systems globally are likely to adapt to a warming world.

“But the fact that we live through an El Nino every few years, we know they’re coming and we still don’t act is a bad sign since many of these climate shifts... will be a lot less predictabl­e as the climate changes,” said Anttila-Hughes. –

 ?? ?? Picture: iStock
Picture: iStock

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