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Sunday, June 1, 2025

Hurricane season is here

by

731 days ago
20230601

The 2023 At­lantic hur­ri­cane sea­son of­fi­cial­ly be­gins to­day and T&T, like every oth­er na­tion in this re­gion, should be alert and pre­pared for the weath­er events like­ly to de­vel­op over the next five months.

Com­pla­cen­cy can be very dan­ger­ous, par­tic­u­lar­ly now that cli­mate change has in­creased the po­ten­tial for tor­ren­tial rain­fall with ac­com­pa­ny­ing strong winds that can in­flict prop­er­ty dam­age, threat­en­ing lives and liveli­hoods.

By now, the Of­fice of Dis­as­ter Pre­pared­ness and Man­age­ment (ODPM) and the To­ba­go Emer­gency Man­age­ment Agency (TEMA) should be ful­ly mo­bilised for what­ev­er this sea­son may send our way. How­ev­er, the re­spon­si­bil­i­ty to be pre­pared al­so ex­tends to every cit­i­zen, par­tic­u­lar­ly those re­sid­ing in vul­ner­a­ble parts of the coun­try.

While one pre­dic­tion is for a slight­ly be­low-av­er­age year with 13 named storms, six hur­ri­canes, and three ma­jor hur­ri­canes, the team at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Ari­zona, well known for the ac­cu­ra­cy of their fore­casts, are ex­pect­ing a busy sea­son with 19 named storms, nine hur­ri­canes and five ma­jor hur­ri­canes.

Usu­al­ly, these are mat­ters that don’t gen­er­ate much in­ter­est or con­cern in T&T, where ex­pe­ri­ences with storms have been so few and far apart that most peo­ple alive to­day have nev­er ex­pe­ri­enced a de­struc­tive hur­ri­cane here.

The last time it hap­pened was nine decades ago, in an era when hur­ri­canes were not named. Ac­counts of the “Hur­ri­cane of 1933” show that the storm formed on June 24 and by June 27, had dev­as­tat­ed sev­er­al parts of south Trinidad.

That Cat­e­go­ry 2 hur­ri­cane, which struck with sus­tained winds of about 137 km/h, caused an es­ti­mat­ed $3 mil­lion in dam­age, left thou­sands home­less and in­flict­ed se­vere dam­age on two pil­lars of the lo­cal econ­o­my at the time — the co­coa and oil in­dus­tries. Among the 13 peo­ple who lost their lives were some who drowned when their boats sank.

In the years since, on­ly a hand­ful of storms have made land­fall here, main­ly be­cause T&T lies south of most of the his­tor­i­cal hur­ri­cane tracks.

How­ev­er, this coun­try is not im­mune to nat­ur­al dis­as­ters and has had the ex­pe­ri­ence in re­cent years of cat­a­stroph­ic weath­er events caused not by the storms that de­vel­op in the At­lantic at this time of year, but by pro­longed pe­ri­ods of thun­der­storm ac­tiv­i­ty.

Thou­sands of cit­i­zens were di­rect­ly af­fect­ed in Oc­to­ber 2018, when an ac­tive In­tertrop­i­cal Con­ver­gence Zone (ITCZ) dumped sev­en days of rain on our is­lands, caus­ing wide­spread se­vere flash flood­ing.

Al­though there was no loss of life, there was wide­spread dam­age when rivers in Ca­roni, Diego Mar­tin and Mar­aval breached their banks. The most cat­a­stroph­ic flood­ing oc­curred in Green­vale, La Hor­quet­ta, while San­gre Grande ex­pe­ri­enced the worst flood­ing in 50 years.

Five years lat­er, with mem­o­ries of that dis­as­ter still fresh, there is cause for con­cern about the po­ten­tial for dis­as­ter in the many flood and land­slip-prone parts of the coun­try, such as Whar­well Road, Table­land, where, just a few days ago, four hous­es tum­bled down a precipice and two are now on the brink of col­lapse in­to that chasm.

Many oth­er com­mu­ni­ties face sim­i­lar per­ils, un­der­scor­ing the need for a high­er lev­el of vig­i­lance and more fo­cus on dis­as­ter mit­i­ga­tion mea­sures in the weeks and months un­til the end of the hur­ri­cane sea­son on No­vem­ber 30.

This is not a mat­ter that T&T should treat light­ly.


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