Caribbean warned to closely monitor water resources as drought continues

May 07, 2019 in Regional

The Barbados-based Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology Monday urged Caribbean countries to “closely monitor water resources and try to conserve as much as possible, at least until June/July” as the drought situation in the region worsens.

In its latest Caribbean Drought and Precipitation Monitoring Network Bulletin, the agency said that there is a concern for most of the Caribbean that the short-term drought situation can impact agriculture, as well as the flow in small rivers and streams except in the vicinity of Cuba, the Bahamas, Jamaica and Cayman islands.

“For longer-term drought that can impact groundwater, and large reservoirs and rivers concerns also extend to Jamaica and Cayman Islands. Most of the Caribbean should therefore closely monitor water resources and try to conserve as much as possible, at least until June/July,” it said.

The institution said that for the current drought situation, Barbados, Martinique, St Lucia, United States Virgin islands have seen long-term drought developing, while shorter-term drought is seen in northern St Kitts.

It said shorter-term drought situation that lasts until the end of July is evolving in Dominica, French Guiana, Grenada, Martinique, St Martin, St Lucia, Suriname, USVI, while shorter-term drought might possibly develop in Aruba, Bonaire, Curacao, Antigua, Barbados, much of Belize, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Hispaniola, parts of Puerto Rico, St Kitts, St Vincent, Trinidad and Tobago.

The institute said that a weak El Nino is expected to contribute to reduced rainfall up until May.

For the first three months of this year, it reported normal to below normal rainfall was experienced in the islands of the Caribbean with Trinidad being “slight to severely dry, Tobago and Antigua moderately dry and Grenada slightly dry”.