Photo: Contributor/IRIN. The drought has lasted six months
Source: IRIN
COLOMBO, 4 April 2014 (IRIN) - Sri Lanka has had six months of drought
and could face severe crop losses and electricity shortages if the
coming monsoon is as weak as forecasts predict, experts say.
“The situation is really, really bad,” said Ranjith Punyawardena, chief
climatologist at the Department of Agriculture. “Already there are
harvest losses and more are anticipated.”
According to Punyawardena, 5 percent (280,000 tons) of the 2014 rice
harvest has already been lost due to the ongoing drought, which
stretches back to November 2013. With 200,000 hectares of rice fields
(20 percent of the annual cultivated total) planted during the secondary
harvesting season already lost, experts say the losses from the drought
could be exacerbated by the forecasted weak southwest monsoon, due in
May.
Sarath Lal Kumara, deputy director at the Disaster Management Centre
(DMC), said the impact of the drought had intensified in the last two
months.
“We are getting more and more reports of lack of water and harvest
losses,” he said, emphasizing that the worst affected regions were the
Northern, North Central and Southern Provinces.
By the end of March 2014 over 240,000 families had been affected by diminished water supply and harvest losses, according
to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
The Ministry of Disaster Management has so far spent US$2.3 million in
assistance. According to the Department of Census and Statistics, at
least 32 percent of the country’s labour force of 8.6 million derives
its income from agriculture.
Sri Lanka has two monsoons a year - the “northeast monsoon” from
December to February and the “southwest monsoon” from mid-May to
September - and relies heavily on the rainwater for agriculture and
hydropower.
Irregular rainfall in recent years has made predicting and preparing for
reduced agricultural yields and electricity generation increasingly
complicated, experts and officials say.
“There are indications that the El NiƱo phenomenon will take effect
towards the middle of this year, in which case there will be less amount
of rainfall,”said Punyawardena.
A rain shortfall this year would be in sharp contrast to the southwest
monsoon in 2013, which moved faster than expected and brought
high-intensity rain. In its first two weeks more than 60 people were
killed by gale force winds or floods, and over 20,000 were left stranded
when their houses were destroyed.
“The southwest monsoon has become increasingly erratic,” explained Punyawardena, pointing to evidence presented at the annual Monsoon Forum, such as the 3,369mm of rainfall recorded in Colombo, the capital, in 2010, which was nearly cut in half the following year.
This year’s drought has also hit the back-up water supply as
inter-monsoonal rains in late 2013 failed; nearly all of the country’s 71 agriculture reservoirs report low water levels.
Power prices could rise
Another consequence of the drought is likely to be electricity price
rises caused by water shortages. The poor will be hit hardest, experts
say.
“If the monsoon fails, the poorer section of the population in the
drought hit regions will become extremely vulnerable,” DMC’s Kumara
said.
As of the first week of April 2014, the Ceylon Electricity Board, which
attempts to generate at least 50 percent of the country’s electricity by
hydropower, reported that only around 13 percent of power needs were
being met by hydro-generation. The government fills the gap with thermal
generation, which relies on imported oil.
“Sri Lanka’s power needs are very reliant on hydro-generation, which
makes them susceptible to changing weather patterns,” said Asoka
Abeygunawardana, executive director of the Sri Lanka Energy Forum and an
adviser to the Ministry of Technology.
Failing rains have in the past slowed down economic growth, he said, by
forcing the government to import oil for power generation, making it an
expensive alternative to hydropower.
According to the Central Bank, around 20 percent of the country’s import
expenditure in 2012 went on fuel, and 55 percent of the oil imported
was used for electricity generation - bringing the price tag to more
than US $2 billion.
“It is a very dire situation that we are faced with this year,” Abeygunawardana said.
“If the rice harvest fails, we will see food prices going up after
August. And if we have a power crisis as well - meaning electricity
becomes more expensive -the poor will again feel the impact,” feared
Punyawardena.
He warned: “If the monsoon fails there will be not enough water for agriculture and power generation for the rest of the year.”