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Hurricane Dean inflicts devastating blow to Caribbean agriculture,
infrastructure
By Naomi Spencer
24 August 2007
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Hurricane Dean swept through the Caribbean and into Mexico
this week, killing at least 25 and causing extensive damage to
homes and infrastructure. In addition to Mexico, the countries
of Belize, Haiti, Jamaica, Martinique, Dominica, St. Lucia, and
other islands of the Lesser Antilles, were impacted by flooding
and winds up to 256 kilometers per hour.
The storm passed through the Caribbean and made landfall in
Mexico as a Category 5 storm. It was the most intense Atlantic
hurricane to hit land since 1992, and the third-most intense Atlantic
storm to hit land since the 1850s, when these figures were first
recorded.
The storm weakened to Category 1 on August 21 as it moved over
the Yucatan Peninsula and into the southern Gulf of Mexico, where
it re-strengthened into a Category 2. After making a second landfall
in central Mexico August 22, Dean weakened to a tropical storm
and caused damage mainly in rural areas. The region remains vulnerable
to flash flooding and mudslides from up to 20 inches of rain.
Most press reports have concentrated on the fate of Mexican
oil installations and tourist hot spots throughout the region,
which were spared all but the most minor damage as Dean skirted
around major cities. As market analyst Donald Light put it to
the Dow Jones MarketWatch on Tuesday, That gentle
breeze you feel this morning is the collective sigh of relief
from the US insurance industry as it watches the current storm
track of Hurricane Dean.
Preliminary estimates put the economic cost at $750 million
to $1.9 billion from the hurricane, figures that only account
for insured property in the region.
However, insured property damage is only a fraction of the
social cost of the storm. Details from some of the worst affected
areas are scarce, but those that are available clearly illustrate
the vulnerability of long-impoverished populations.
The Mexican government has yet to issue an official damage
report for the Yucatan region, where thousands live in huts constructed
of sticks and grass. However, an Associated Press report August
23 portrayed the mainly Mayan communities there in a state of
ruin and virtual abandonment by the government two days after
landfall.
Thousands of Mayan Indians lost homes as Hurricane Dean
blew through the Yucatan peninsula, the AP reported, but
their real wealth was the trees, now scattered and broken in the
storms wake. Village after village is carpeted with fallen
mangoes, oranges, guanabanas and mameys that will never be harvested.
If I just sit and wait until they help me, Ill
die waiting, one resident told the AP. If I wait,
with my hand out, whos going to give me food, and where
am I going to cook it? Id rather start working, first.
There isnt even any corn to eat, another
survivor said, waiting in line for government trucks to arrivewhich
reportedly brought only bottled water and thick blankets.
In the state of Quintana Roo, where Dean first made landfall
in Mexico, much of the impoverished Mayan population refused to
evacuate out of distrust for the Mexican military. Cahetumal,
the states low-lying capital and home to nearly 137,000,
was flooded and left without electricity. Across the state, one
million hectares (2.47 million acres) of crops were destroyed.
The city of Carmen, situated between the coast and a lake, saw
significant flooding that damaged hundreds of homes.
In the central Mexican states of Hidalgo and Veracruz, 50,000
people have been left isolated, two people were killed, and 250,000
hectares (617,750 acres) of crops were lost. Torrential rains
in Mexico City continue to threaten parts of the city with flooding.
In Jamaica, where Dean was responsible for four deaths, entire
neighborhoods have been blown apart and inundated with mud. Damage
was particularly acute in poor neighborhoods, where houses are
built of sheet metal, plywood scraps, and other makeshift materials.
Many houses built after the island was devastated in 2004 by Hurricane
Ivan were torn apart.
Despite the insecure housing construction, most Jamaicans remained
in their homes rather than government emergency shelters, apparently
out of fear of violence in the sheltersas happened in previous
hurricanes. Three-quarters of the 1,000 shelters remained vacant
throughout the storm.
Aid agency Oxfam estimates that as many as 300,000 Jamaicans
have been displaced by Dean, and the Caribbean Disaster Emergency
Response Agency estimates that anywhere from 15,000 to 60,000
families in Jamaica require immediate assistance with home repair,
water, food and shelter. For its part, the Jamaican governmentwhich,
by comparison, puts the number of damaged houses at only 1,600promised
to distribute housing materials, bedding, and food to the first
600 people who visited the prime ministers office.
Electricity remains out across the entire island, according
to British-based Christian Aid workers in Jamaica, and downed
cell towers have made communication difficult.
Roads are blocked by trees and other debris in Jamaicas
capital of Kingston, and some roads were washed out by sea sand,
including the one connecting Kingston to its major airport. According
to the National Solid Waste Management Authority, the agencys
road clean-up efforts are crippled by a shortage of trucks; for
the entire island, the government has only 20 trucks.
Water shortages are a mounting problem in Jamaicas residential
areas. Public water distribution has been damaged, and hospitals
are receiving priority trucking of water.
Destruction of agriculture
The agricultural sector of Jamaica, as throughout the Caribbean,
has been all but destroyed. Bananas are a key export for the Caribbean,
and replanting or repair of damaged trees will take several years.
Agriculture minister Roger Clarke stated that Dean destroyed
all of Jamaicas major export crops, and the growing areas
of the south have suffered major dislocation. Clarke
pointed not only to the physical destruction of farmland and the
financial ruin of farmers and venders, but also to the growing
reluctance of international financiers to reinsure and do business
with the Caribbean.
Although Jamaica, along with 18 other Caribbean nations, signed
on to a catastrophic risk insurance program introduced by the
World Bank in February, bank officials stated that damages from
Dean were not significant enough to trigger a payout. Officials
declined to disclose what the minimum damage would have to be.
Likewise, on the national level, a special Catastrophe
Fund established by the agriculture ministry was deemed
by minister Clarke as too young to compensate for
the disaster. Clarke suggested farmers work through local organizations
to cope, rather than expecting government help in the event of
catastrophic crop loss.
Haiti lost major portions of its banana, bean, and yam crops
to wind and salt water on its southern coast. Government officials
have yet to survey the area or pledge aid. Christian Aid workers
in Haiti report that drinking water and foodespecially baby
foodare badly needed, along with bedding, building materials,
and agricultural supplies.
As one farmer explained in Mondays Miami Herald,
They come, they take our names, but they never offer any
help... Here we live on bananas; we have nothing else.... We are
merely peasants.
Nearly three-quarters of the Haitian population depends upon
agriculture, which employs over two thirds of the nations
labor force for extremely low wages. Largely as a result of US
policy, the Haitian population is perpetually exposed to humanitarian
crises.
Elsewhere, populations now face similarly disastrous situations.
In Martinique, virtually all banana-growing operations and 70
percent of sugar cane plantations were destroyed, according to
a French government assessment. The Martinique agriculture minister
told the Associated Press that many farmers may decide not to
replant, commenting, They dont know which saint to
devote themselves to anymore.
On nearby Guadeloupe Island, most banana plantations were also
destroyed. Banana producers union president Eric de Lucy told
France Info radio August 18, There are considerable economic
consequences for this sector because there is not a single banana
plant left standing in Martinique and more than 80 percent of
the banana plantations in Guadeloupe are affected. De Lucy
predicted production would not resume for seven months, and then
only at half previous levels. An estimated 10,000 agricultural
workers have been put out of work there.
St. Lucia prime minister Stephenson King described the agricultural
devastation as permanent. From what we have seen, farmers
may have to start all over again as the last of the banana industry
may have been wiped out.
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