Mid-Week Surge of Saharan Dust Forecast

Saharan Dust concentrations are forecast to increase by mid-week following the passage of Tropical Wave 17, with mild to moderate concentrations lingering through the first week of July.

What you need to know

Saharan Dust Surges: A moderate concentration surge of Saharan Dust is forecast to move across Trinidad and Tobago and the Lesser Antilles following the passage of Tropical Wave 17 by late Wednesday, with additional surges arriving by Sunday, July 2nd, 2023, and late Tuesday, July 4th, 2023.
Impacts: Through the next seven to ten days, air quality levels across Trinidad and Tobago are forecast to remain between good and moderate levels.
What Should You Do: Sensitive groups may need to take the necessary precautions, particularly during high-traffic periods and in the vicinity of bushfires.

Current AQI Levels Across T&T

The official air quality monitoring stations from the Environmental Management Agency (EMA) at San Fernando, Arima, and Point Lisas are reporting moderate air quality levels at this time, while stations at Beetham and Port of Spain, and Signal Hill, Tobago, are not reporting PM2.5 or PM10 data as of late Monday afternoon.

These measurements are based on PM2.5 (particulates the size of 2.5 micrometers and smaller, usually associated with increases in Saharan Dust, vehicle exhaust, and smoke) and PM10 particulates.

Over the last 24 hours, visibility remained unaffected by Saharan Dust and smoke at the A.N.R. Robinson International Airport at Crown Point, Tobago, and the Piarco International Airport, Trinidad.

Saharan Dust Forecast

00Z Monday, June 26th, 2023, NASA GEOS-5 Dust Extinction Model Monitoring Tropical Atlantic Aerosol Optical Depth showing Saharan Dust.
00Z Monday, June 26th, 2023, NASA GEOS-5 Dust Extinction Model Monitoring Tropical Atlantic Aerosol Optical Depth showing Saharan Dust.

Surges to follow tropical waves

A moderate concentration surge of Saharan Dust is forecast to move across Trinidad and Tobago and the Lesser Antilles following the passage of Tropical Wave 17 by late Wednesday. Concentrations are forecast to remain at elevated levels, with some decrease on Friday into Saturday as the Intertropical Convergence Zone drifts across T&T. Another surge is forecast to arrive by Sunday, July 2nd, 2023, with mild to moderate concentrations, and another by late Tuesday, July 4th, 2023.

The highest concentrations over the next ten days are forecast from late Wednesday through late Thursday across T&T.

Through the next seven to ten days, air quality levels across Trinidad and Tobago are forecast to remain between good and moderate levels, with occasional improvement during the passages of tropical waves.

What does this mean for you?

The air quality is forecast to be lowered primarily during high traffic periods, particularly between 6:00 AM and 9:00 AM and again from 3:00 PM through 6:30 PM.

We’re in a period where the Intertropical Convergence Zone and tropical waves and occasional tropical cyclones may shield Trinidad and Tobago from the Saharan Dust events. While Tropical Waves play a notable role in moving dust across the Atlantic and the Eastern Caribbean, these periodic tropical waves also improve air quality.

The concentration of the dust that follows the wave depends on its strength as it moves off the West African Coast. This is because of stronger thunderstorms across Central Africa. As strong winds move downward and outward from these thunderstorms, the wind kicks up dust as it moves across parts of the Saharan Desert and transports it into the upper atmosphere. This “plume” of dust follows the axis of the wave as it progresses westward into the Atlantic.

Dust that makes it into the upper levels of the atmosphere can then get transported across the Atlantic Ocean. The plumes of dust eventually affect the Eastern Caribbean.

Larger, more concentrated plumes of Saharan dust begin in April and continue through November.

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