By Tim Cocks
JOHANNESBURG, Jan ā29 (Reuters) - A "perfect storm" of climate change and cyclical La NiƱa weather patterns fuelled catastrophic flooding across southern Africa over the past month, ā killing 200 people and affecting hundreds of thousands of others, a study showed on Thursday.
The report by World Weather Attribution showed that the āintensity of such extreme rainfall events has increased by 40% since preindustrial times - a āclear sign that warmer ocean temperatures linked to greenhouse gas emissions are partly to blame - and that current La NiƱa conditions had worsened things.Ā Ā
Severe flooding āsince December has wrought havoc across Mozambique, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Eswatini, "with some areas receiving over a yearās rain in just days," the study said. Burst rivers forced the closure of South Africa's Kruger park, and will cost millions of dollars to repair.
"Data confirms āa clear move toward more violent downpours," WWA said. "This effect was compounded āby the current La NiƱa, which naturally brings wetter conditions to this part of the āworld, but is now operating within a ... more moisture-rich atmosphere."
La NiƱa involves the temporary cooling of temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific āOcean. The World Meteorological Organization has predicted a weak La NiƱa in this ā cycle, but warned that warmer-than-normal sea temperatures linked to climate āchange are increasing the chance of āfloods and droughts.
"Human-caused climate change is supercharging rainfall events like this with devastating impacts for those in its path," Izidine Pinto, co-author and senior ā climate researcher at the ā Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute said.
"Our analysis clearly shows that our continued burning āof fossil fuels is increasing the intensity of extreme rainfall, turning (it) ... into something much more severe."
(Reporting by āTim Cocks;Editing by Alison Williams)




