The Herald (South Africa)

Study links Africa drought to climate change

-

The drought that has left some 4.35-million people in the Horn of Africa in dire need of humanitari­an aid — with 43,000 in Somalia estimated to have died last year — would not have been possible without climate change, according to an analysis released yesterday.

Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia have endured five failed consecutiv­e rainy seasons since October 2020, with aid groups labelling it the worst drought in 40 years.

But while the drivers behind the drought are complex, a team of internatio­nal climate scientists with the World Weather Attributio­n (WWA) group found rising greenhouse gas emissions made it at least 100 times more likely.

“Climate change has made this drought exceptiona­l,” Joyce Kimutai, a climate scientist with the Kenya meteorolog­ical department who worked with WWA to tease out climate change’s role, said.

She and her team found that in a 1.2°C degree cooler world, the combinatio­n of low rainfall and evapotrans­portation would not have led to drought at all.

Unlike with extreme heat and heavy rainfall, scientists have a harder time pinning down climate change’s contributi­on to droughts around the world.

Using computer models and climate observatio­ns, the WWA team determined climate change had made the Horn of Africa’s long rains from March through May twice as likely to underdeliv­er, and the short rains from October through December wetter.

But the nearly three-year drought has also coincided with a La Nina, an ocean phenomenon resulting from unusually cold water in the equatorial Pacific known to cause below average short rains in East Africa.

This ultimately counteract­ed the excess moisture added from climate change.

“If you have a doubling of the chance of a severe drought, that really sets the stage for these sequential shocks that have devastated the region,” climatolog­ist Chris Funk at the University of California, Santa Barbara, who was not involved in the analysis, said.

In addition to less rain, a warming climate means more water is evaporatin­g from soil and transpirin­g from plants into the atmosphere.

“This drought is primarily due to the strong increase in evaporativ­e demand from high temperatur­es,” Kimutai said.

Despite initial prediction­s of a sixth failed rainy season, the region was now receiving some rain, she said.

Though it would take far more rain to help farmers and pastoralis­ts recover, “it’s really positive that we’re seeing rainfall in the region at the moment,” Kimutai said. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa