Jean-Marc Rampersad
Climate Change Editor
jean-marc.rampersad
@guardian.co.tt
Heavy rains and thunderstorms swept across T&T yesterday, leaving a trail of fallen trees, flash floods, and infrastructure damage in their wake.
The country’s first Adverse Weather Alert for June took effect at 2 am.
Within hours, the showers left emergency crews in Tobago scrambling to respond to incidents from Mason Hall to Scarborough. Safety concerns prompted officials from the Division of Education, Research and Technology to order the closure of all schools in Tobago around 10.30 am.
The weather system hit Tobago and northern Trinidad particularly hard, with the Tobago Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) and the Ministry of Rural Development and Local Government (RDLG) working through the morning to clear fallen trees from blocked roadways.
By day’s end, authorities had recorded 13 weather-related incidents, ranging from fallen trees and landslides to flooding.
“At this time, all our regional corporations are on high alert,” said Rural Development and Local Government Minister Khadijah Ameen.
“All of the flood mitigation efforts continue, but where we have emergencies arising, we will divert equipment and personnel.”
The minister also addressed concerns about the partial collapse of the main road in Aripo, explaining that while yesterday’s weather played a role, the incident stemmed from an ongoing erosion issue that authorities had been monitoring.
TEMA reported ten weather-related incidents by 2 pm. Trees crashed down in Mason Hall, Glamorgan, Belle Garden, and Charlotteville, while floodwaters inundated areas in Whim and Scarborough.
In Delaford, a fallen tree damaged a house, and in Belle Garden, high-tension electrical wires came to rest dangerously on a rooftop.
In a 6 pm update, officials of the Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA) said that surface water treatment facilities across Tobago and Northern Trinidad were struggling with high turbidity levels and clogged screens—direct results of rivers swollen by the day’s heavy rainfall.
The Trinidad and Tobago Meteorological Service (TTMS) updated their alert at 10 am yesterday, warning that more significant rainfall is expected to return today. The current alert remains active until 4 pm today, pending any further updates.
Additional rainfall is forecast for tomorrow and Friday, with a moderate chance of thunderstorms that could bring similar conditions back to both islands.
While riverine flooding is not currently a major concern, meteorologists warn that persistent rainfall heading into Friday will gradually increase flood risks, especially across Northern Trinidad where drainage systems are already saturated.
In addition, Spring Tides are also now in effect following last night’s full moon. These higher-than-normal high tides will slow water runoff during peak tide times, and further elevate flood risks across vulnerable coastal and low-lying areas.