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    HomeAfricaClimate change, La NiƱa fuelled southern Africa's catastrophic floods

    Climate change, La NiƱa fuelled southern Africa’s catastrophic floods

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    By Tim Cocks

    JOHANNESBURG, Jan ​29 (Reuters) - A "perfect storm" of climate change and cyclical La NiƱa weather patterns fuelled catastrophic flooding across southern Africa over the past month, ⁠killing 200 people and affecting hundreds of thousands of others, a study showed on Thursday.

    The report by World Weather Attribution showed that the ā€intensity of such extreme rainfall events has increased by 40% since preindustrial times - a ​clear 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 ​since December has wrought havoc across Mozambique, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Eswatini, "with some areas receiving over a year’s 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 ā€Œa clear move toward more violent downpours," WWA said. "This effect was compounded ā€Œby the current La NiƱa, which naturally brings wetter conditions to this part of the ​world, but is now operating within a ... more moisture-rich atmosphere."

    La NiƱa involves the temporary cooling of temperatures in the central and eastern Pacific ā€ŒOcean. The World Meteorological Organization has predicted a weak La NiƱa in this ⁠cycle, but warned that warmer-than-normal sea temperatures linked to climate ā€Œchange are increasing the chance of ​floods 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 ⁠climate researcher at the ⁠Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute said.

    "Our analysis clearly shows that our continued burning ​of fossil fuels is increasing the intensity of extreme rainfall, turning (it) ... into something much more severe."

    (Reporting by ā€ŒTim Cocks;Editing by Alison Williams)

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