This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site you agree to our use of cookies. To find out more, see our Privacy and Cookies policy.

Environmental Research Letters


Darfur: rainfall and conflict

Michael Kevane1 and Leslie Gray2

Show affiliations


Data on rainfall patterns only weakly corroborate the claim that climate change explains the Darfur conflict that began in 2003 and has claimed more than 200 000 lives and displaced more than two million persons. Rainfall in Darfur did not decline significantly in the years prior to the eruption of major conflict in 2003; rainfall exhibited a flat trend in the thirty years preceding the conflict (1972–2002). The rainfall evidence suggests instead a break around 1971. Rainfall is basically stationary over the pre- and post-1971 sub-periods. The break is larger for the more northerly rainfall stations, and is less noticeable for En Nahud. Rainfall in Darfur did indeed decline, but the decline happened over 30 years before the conflict erupted. Preliminary analysis suggests little merit to the proposition that a structural break several decades earlier is a reasonable predictor of the outbreak of large-scale civil conflict in Africa.


PACS

92.60.Jq Water in the atmosphere (humidity, clouds, evaporation, precipitation)

93.30.Bz Africa

92.60.Ry Climatology

Subjects

Environmental and Earth science

Dates

Issue 3 (July-September 2008)

Received 25 May 2008, accepted for publication 31 July 2008

Published 29 August 2008

Metrics

Total article downloads: 7516

More metrics



  1. Darfur: rainfall and conflict

    Michael Kevane and Leslie Gray 2008 Environ. Res. Lett. 3 034006

View by subject




Export