Global Warming Behind Somali Drought
The severe drought in the Horn of Africa, which has caused the death of at least 30,000 children and is affecting some 12 million people, especially in Somalia, is a direct consequence of weather phenomena associated with climate change and global warming, environmental scientists say.
'The present drought in the Horn of Africa has been provoked by El Niño and La Niña phenomena in the Pacific Ocean, which unsettle the normal circulation of warm and cold water and air, and dislocate the humidity conditions across the southern hemisphere,' Friedrich-Wilhelm Gerstengarbe, senior scientist at the German Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK, after its German name), told IPS.
Both phenomena are a part of the southern oscillation climate pattern, that occurs across the tropical Pacific ocean every five to seven years. It is characterised by variations in the temperature of the surface of the tropical eastern Pacific - warming or cooling known as El Niño and La Niña respectively - and a changing air surface pressure in the western Pacific.
Both phenomena are coupled: the warm oceanic phase, El Niño, accompanies high air surface pressure in the western Pacific, while the cold phase, La Niña, accompanies low air surface pressure in the western Pacific.
Such conditions can particularly affect regions north of the Equator, such as the Horn of Africa. Some 12 million people are facing starvation across the region, Djibouti, Sudan, South Sudan and parts of Uganda, besides Somalia. So far, famine has only been declared in Somalia, a state without a functioning government.
'El Niño and La Niña exacerbate the weather conditions across the southern hemisphere, escalating the rainy season in some areas, especially in Asia and Australia, and droughts in others, especially in Africa,' Gerstengarbe said.
Gerstengarbe says climate change and the rising global temperatures caused by it have intensified both El Niño and La Niña, leading to severe floods in Pakistan and Australia, and drought in the Horn of Africa.
Both phenomena have led during the last two years to particularly dry rainy seasons and to extreme hot temperatures over East Africa.
According to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), La Niña has since 2008 caused a strong drop in water temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, leading to a 'below-average precipitation over the central equatorial Pacific.'
These cold episodes (referred to as La Niña episodes), the NOAA adds, are characterised by lower than normal pressure over Indonesia and northern Australia and higher than normal pressure over the eastern tropical Pacific.
During cold episodes the normal patterns of tropical precipitation and atmospheric air circulation become disrupted. The abnormally cold waters in the equatorial central Pacific Ocean suppress cloudiness and rainfall, especially between November and April, that is, precisely during the regional rainy season.
The phenomenon leads to hotter temperatures in East Africa. Both the suppression of rain and the higher temperatures this year have caused the worst drought in the Horn of Africa for 60 years.
'Unfortunately, due to the intensification of La Niña, we must reckon with growing desertification in Africa, and with more droughts in the region around the Horn of Africa,' Gerstengarbe added.
Jean-Cyril Dagorn, in charge of environment and economic justice for the French branch of the humanitarian organisation Oxfam, concurred that climate change and global warming are exacerbating extreme weather conditions in Africa.
'For two years, rain precipitation has been below average in East Africa, due to La Niña,' Dagorn told IPS. 'But this year, the drought has been extreme, provoking the present humanitarian catastrophe in Somalia and other adjacent regions.'
Dagorn said that the coming rainy season, scheduled to start in October, may intensify the crisis. 'Torrential rain falling on extreme dry earth will wash away the most fertile soil, making the food crisis even more dramatic,' Dagorn warned.
Dagorn said droughts have so far occurred every five to seven years in the Horn of Africa, but almost never with the extreme conditions of today.
'We estimate that due to climate change and the droughts it causes, agricultural productivity in the region will fall by up to 20 percent in the coming decades, especially in the maize and bean plantations,' Dagorn said.
Besides, he said, the region’s cattle breeders and shepherds have lost between 30 and 60 percent of their livestock due to extreme weather conditions, aggravating the food crisis.
Dagorn said that the both the agricultural policies of the countries affected by the droughts, and international cooperation have failed to address the issue.
The United Nations has said 1.6 billion euros would be needed to address the crisis. 'But France, for instance, has only allocated less than 10 million euros,' Dagorn said. „It announced urgent meetings of donors - which never took place.'
Dagorn said humanitarian organisations are buying cattle in poor condition to distribute the meat among the communities most affected by the famine.
Gerstengarbe says climate change and associated phenomena, and bad agricultural practices such as overgrazing, are leading to increasing desertification across Africa. 'Deserts are growing worldwide by some 150 square kilometres a day, but especially across Africa.'
In July, the head of the United States agency for international development, Rajiv Shah, said that climate change has contributed to the severity of the crisis.
'There's no question that hotter and drier growing conditions in sub-Saharan Africa have reduced the resiliency of these communities,' Shah told U.S. media. 'The change in climate has contributed to this problem, without question.'
© Inter Press Service (2011) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service