The Caribbean is two months into the 2024 Atlantic Hurricane Season and one major storm has already swept through the region. Hurricane Beryl broke records by being the earliest recorded major storm to form in June, causing widespread destruction across the Caribbean. The severity of this storm is attributed to climate change, as it developed faster and earlier in the year than storms of a similar nature. Today, News Five’s Britney Gordon sat down with a few climate change experts to learn why this phenomenon is occurring and how climate change impacts the way Caribbean countries must adapt to hurricane preparedness. Here’s that story.
Britney Gordon, Reporting
Every day, the livelihoods of millions of people across the Caribbean are threatened by climate change. Whether in the tourism sector, or the fisherfolks out at sea, the loss of flora and fauna due to global warming has an impact on everyone in the region. However, these impacts are becoming more dangerous as the Earth continues to warm. Hurricanes are becoming more intense, droughts more severe, and those with little to no means of survival are much more vulnerable to these threats. Doctor Colin Young, Executive Director of the Caribbean Community Climate Change Center, explains how the climate is affecting the formation of storms.
Dr. Colin Young, Executive Director, CCCCC
“The same way the world is warming up in terms on land from greenhouse gases. These are your carbon dioxide and methane and other gases that trap the heat that the ocean is also absorbing the heat. And the warmer the ocean gets, the more likely it is that when hurricanes form, that they get stronger quicker. And so the intensity. Is the issue that you saw with burial. And why is this scary? It’s scary because it gives very little time for people to get ready and for the authorities to warn persons to either move out of the part of the stop of the storm or to do the preparations that that you need.”
Michael Taylor, Director, Climate Studies, Mona
“What we don’t have the greatest of science to do right now is predict the rapid intensification, as you have said, so it’s not that we didn’t get a warning that there would be a hurricane, but the amount of time to prepare for this severity of the hurricane now is reduced, and that has a significant impact because it means, you know, the preparations you’d have been doing for a tropical storm or a tropical depression suddenly have to become preparations overnight for a major hurricane.”
“The Caribbean is at the frontline of the war on climate change. Our people are suffering the damages and we’re paying in lives and livelihoods from these hurricanes.”
“Things that we call, used to call urgent, are no longer urgent. There are immediate needs, you know, so things like, okay, we need to mitigate. So we need to decrease the greenhouse gas emissions so that we can keep the future temperature to one point five or, you know, two degrees. That’s no longer something that’s urgent that we should do. We have to do it. And so we. You know, people like me and you, citizens, we have to pay attention now to the cops, and look at what the countries are pledging in terms of their greenhouse gas emissions, including our own countries, and say, boy, we have to do more.”
Britney Gordon for News Five.