Rainfall alone didn’t cause landslide, flooding in Mindanao

Rainfall alone didn’t cause landslide, flooding in Mindanao

/ 03:33 PM March 01, 2024

This screengrab from AFPTV aerial video footage taken on February 7, 2024 shows the site of a landslide in Davao de Oro province on Mindanao island in the southern Philippines. Faulty warning systems, poverty and deforestation of mountains in the southern Philippines turned recent unseasonally heavy rains into deadly disasters, weather experts said in a report on March 1, 2024. (Photo by Renante Naparan / AFPTV / AFP)

MANILA, Philippines — Faulty warning systems, poverty, and deforestation of mountains in Mindanao turned recent unseasonably heavy rains into deadly disasters, scientists said in a report Friday.

More than 100 people were killed in landslides and floods in January and February on the country’s second-largest island of Mindanao as the northeast monsoon and a low pressure trough brought downpours.

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A study by the World Weather Attribution group found the unusually heavy rain in eastern Mindanao was not “particularly extreme.”

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But with people living in landslide-prone areas and shortcomings in weather alerts, the rains became “devastating.”

“We can’t just blame the rain for the severe impacts,” said Richard Ybaez, chief science research specialist at the University of the Philippines’ Resilience Institute.

“A range of human factors is what turned these downpours into deadly disasters.”

In the deadliest incident, more than 90 people were killed when the side of a mountain collapsed and smashed into the gold mining village of Masara on February 6, burying buses and houses.

While climate change was likely one of the drivers of the heavy rain, the report said scientists were not able to quantify its impact due to the lack of available data.

“However, we did detect a strong trend in the historical data — compared to the pre-industrial climate, the heaviest five-day periods of rainfall now drop around 50 percent more rainfall on Mindanao island in the December to February period,” said Mariam Zachariah of the Grantham Institute at Imperial College London.

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The scientists found that a higher-than-average rate of poverty in the mountainous region had left people vulnerable to the impacts of heavier rainfall, while “intensified deforestation” had increased the risk of landslides.

“Across the region of study, construction in areas declared ‘no-build zones’ raises these dangers considerably,” the report said.

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The report said policies, laws, and funding of disaster risk management “have largely stalled over the past decades” and were concentrated on post-disaster response.

For example, automated sensors for rainfall and stream level in the region “have not been recording data since at least 2022,” after funding for maintenance and data transmission was cut.

The report also faulted the country’s weather forecasts and warnings, which “have limited granularity on local risk and lack instructions on where and when to evacuate.”

“Evacuations from high-risk locations were carried out when the island was hit by the rainfall in late January. However, many people were still in harm’s way,” said Ybanez.

“It is critical that both early warning systems and assessment of landslide-prone areas are improved to avoid similar disasters in the future,” he said.

The report also warned that the recent rains would have been “more extreme” were it not for the El Niño weather phenomenon causing drier conditions across the country.

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The tropical archipelago nation — which is ranked among the most vulnerable countries to the impacts of climate change — is usually affected by around 20 major storms a year.

TAGS: Davao de Oro landslide

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