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Extreme weather grips Southeast Asian nations

Intensified typhoons, flash floods raise need for mitigation measures: Experts

By PRIME SARMIENTO in Hong Kong | China Daily | Updated: 2024-12-12 10:02
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A resident opens a window to his house as he stands in floodwaters from an overflowing river following torrential rain in Mojokerto, East Java Province, Indonesia, on Monday. JUNI KRISWANTO/AFP

Southeast Asia is ending the year facing heavy flooding and landslides that risk displacing people, damaging crops and threatening the economic outlook.

While the La Nina weather system usually brings heavy rains to the region during the fourth quarter, climate change has intensified typhoons and flash floods this year.

Experts said the harsh impact of extreme weather events raises the need for members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to implement climate adaptation and mitigation measures.

The ASEAN Specialized Meteorological Centre has forecast a wet season in the months ahead, with "an increased chance of above-normal rainfall" from December to February.

Last week, the ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance, or AHA Centre, said floods, landslides, and storms have hit Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand.

On Wednesday, the Asian Development Bank's latest outlook said Southeast Asia's GDP would expand by 4.7 percent this year. However, geopolitical tensions, trade fragmentation and severe weather events — such as Typhoon Yagi and Tropical Storm Trami — pose risks to growth, particularly in agriculture and infrastructure.

Southeast Asia is not expected to see any respite soon. The Malaysian Meteorological Department has forecast heavy rains to continue in the states of Johor, Kelantan, Pahang, Terengganu, Sabah, and Sarawak in the next few months.

Royboon Rassameethes, director of Thailand's Hydro-Informatics Institute, told the Thai Public Broadcasting Service that flooding in southern Thai provinces may last into the new year before the situation improves.

Elyssa Kaur Ludher, a visiting fellow for the Climate Change in Southeast Asia Program at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, said monsoon season in the region usually occurs during the fourth quarter, so heavy rains at the tail end of the year are a normal event.

Warmer oceans

"However, the severity has increased due to our oceans becoming warmer, bringing more moist air to our region, which is a result of climate change," Ludher said.

Khor Yu Leng, director of Singapore-based consultancy Segi Enam Advisors, said climate change is influencing global rainfall variability and cyclonic patterns, leading to an increase in monsoon-related flooding.

Khor, a veteran commodities trade analyst, said the current flooding in southern Thailand and northern Malaysia was worsened by high population density in flood-prone areas, vulnerable river systems, coastal exposure, and inadequate flood defenses.

Malaysian palm oil exports are expected to decline, which rallied palm oil futures early this week. The Rubber Authority of Thailand said the heavy flooding in the country damaged roughly 800,000 hectares and would lead to 20 billion baht ($591 million) in lost revenues as farmers will not be able to tap their rubber trees for another six weeks.

In Indonesia's West Java and Banten, which are among the country's most populous provinces, flooding, landslides and storms have displaced over 6,000 people and damaged buildings, roads, and farmlands.

Amien Widodo, a senior researcher at the Disaster Mitigation and Climate Change Research Center at the Sepuluh Nopember Institute of Technology in East Java, warned of the impact of La Nina.

He said heavy rains in the next two months will mean farmers have to postpone rice planting in West Java, a key rice-producing region.

He noted that regulating property development projects is one way to reduce the impact of extreme weather events.

Ludher of the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute said in the past, the increased rainfall brought by La Nina was a boon to Southeast Asian farmers as more than half of agricultural lands were rain-fed.

However, she said prolonged flooding results in waterlogged soil, contamination, and the proliferation of pests, which in turn reduces yields. She added that severe flooding can also affect crop storage and supply chains.

Leonardus Jegho in Jakarta contributed to this story.

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