Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Parched Caribbean facing widespread drought, shortages

- By Danica Coto Associated Press

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — The worst drought in five years is creeping across the Caribbean, prompting officials around the region to brace for a bone dry summer.

From Puerto Rico to Cuba to the eastern Caribbean island of St. Lucia, crops are withering, reservoirs are drying up and cattle are dying while forecaster­s worry that the situation could only grow worse.

Thanks to El Nino, a warming of the tropical Pacific that affects global weather, and a quietertha­n-normal hurricane season that began in June, forecaster­s expect a shorter wet season. That means less rain to help refill Puerto Rico’s thirsty Carraizo and La Plata reservoirs as well as the La Plata River in the central island community of Naranjito. A tropical disturbanc­e that hit the U.S. territory recently did not fill up those reservoirs as officials had anticipate­d.

Puerto Rico is among the Caribbean islands worst-hit by the water shortage, with more than1.5 million people affected by the drought so far, according to the U.S. National Drought Mitigation Center.

Thousands of people receive water only every third day under strict rationing recently imposed by the island government. Puerto Rico in June also activated National Guard troops to help distribute water and approved a resolution to impose fines for improper water use.

The Caribbean’s last severe drought was in 2010. The current one could grow worse if the hurricane season ending in November produces scant rainfall and the region enters the dry season with parched reservoirs, said Cedric Van Meerbeeck, a climatolog­ist with the Caribbean Institute for Meteorolog­y and Hydrology.

“We might have serious water shortages … for irrigation of crops, firefighti­ng, domestic consumptio­n or consumptio­n by the hotel sector,” he said.

The Caribbean isn’t the only area in the Western Hemisphere dealing with extreme water shortages. Brazil has been struggling with its own severe drought that has drained reservoirs serving Sao Paulo.

In the Caribbean,

the farm sector has lost more than $1 million in crops as well as tens of thousands of dollars in livestock, said Norman Gibson, scientific officer at the Trinidadba­sed Caribbean Agricultur­al Research and Developmen­t Institute.

On St. Lucia, which has been especially hard hit, farmers say crops including coconuts, cashews and oranges are withering.

“The outlook is very, very bad,” said Anthony Herman, who oversees a local farm cooperativ­e. “The trees are dying, the plants are dying. … It’s stripping the very life of rivers.”

Officials in Cuba say 75 percent of the island is enduring a drought that has killed cattle and destroyed thousands of acres of crops, including plantains, citrus, rice and beans. Recent heavy rains in some areas have alleviated the problem some, but all 200 government-run reservoirs are far below capacity.

In the nearby Dominican Republic, water shortages have been reported in hundreds of communitie­s, said Martin Melendez, a civil engineer and hydrology expert who has worked as a government consultant.

The tourism sector has also been affected.

Most large hotels in Puerto Rico have big water tanks and some recycle wastewater to irrigate green areas, but many have curtailed water use, said Frank Comito, CEO of the Floridabas­ed Caribbean Hotel & Tourism Associatio­n.

Other hotels have cut back on sprinkler time by up to 50 percent, said Carlos Martinez of Puerto Rico’s Associatio­n of Hotels. “Everybody here is worried,” he said. “They are selling water tanks like hot cakes … and begging God for rain.”

Guests at Puerto Rico’s El Canario by the Lagoon hotel get a note with their room keys asking them to keep their showers short amid the water shortage. “We need your cooperatio­n to avoid waste,” says the message distribute­d at the front desk of the hotel in the popular Condado district.

At the Casa del Vega guesthouse in St. Lucia, tourists sometimes find the water in their rooms turned off for the day, preventing them from taking a shower.

“Even though we have a drought guests are not sympatheti­c to that,” hotel manager Merlyn Compton said.

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