
Excerpt from pressreader.com
THROUGHOUT THE mid-20th century to the present, one of the foremost global issues has been that of climate change and its compounding impacts on the global populus. Due to global warming, modifications in weather patterns have resulted in increased extreme weather events, unpredictable water availability, and increased water scarcity (UNICEF, 2024). In Jamaica, an intensification of hydroclimatic variability across seasons is being observed, manifested as a shift in the island’s traditional rainfall patterns. Over recent years, precipitation events have been characterised by unpredictable, short-duration, high-intensity storms, which generate rapid surface runoff rather than infiltration and groundwater recharge. Similarly, the occurrence of drought has become increasingly periodic. Unpredictable rainfall has also meant longer dry spells, plunging Jamaica into drought-like conditions for months at a time. During an interview with Dr Arpita Mandal, senior lecturer at the University of the West Indies, Mona, she stressed that “increases in drought-like conditions affect all sectors across the island”. The perpetual impacts of climate change on Jamaica’s substandard water distribution network specifically, however, deepens islandwide water inequity. Water inequity is the unequal access to water resources and services shaped by social, economic, political, and environmental disparities, affecting vulnerable groups (Sustainability Directory, 2025). As unpredictable rainfall and droughts occur more habitually, impacts on water resources are inevitable, necessitating resilient and equitable water-management solutions for groups facing unique vulnerabilities.