PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia. — Smog from forest fires,
which costs Southeast Asian economies billions in lost tourist
dollars, could worsen as changing weather patterns cause an
unusually dry spell, the region’s environment ministers warned on
Tuesday.
The effects of the La Nina weather phenomenon are
expected to wear off in the third quarter of 2008, which could
result in arid conditions, the ministers said, quoting a forecast
from the ASEAN Meteorological Center.
"This could lead to drier periods and the
possibility of escalating hot-spot activities during the coming dry
season," environment ministers from Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand,
Singapore and Brunei said in a statement.
La Nina refers to an abnormal cooling of sea
surface temperatures in the Pacific Ocean, while its counterpart El
Nino refers to a warming of surface temperatures.
Since 1997, peat and forest fires in Indonesia’s
Sumatra and Borneo islands have triggered a choking haze which
billows across the region, affecting Singapore, Malaysia and parts
of Thailand.
The ASEAN ministers had gathered in the Malaysian
administrative capital to discuss the haze, which usually occurs
around mid-year as farmers and timber and plantation firms in the
region openly burn plots of land ahead of the planting season.
ASEAN, the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations, groups the countries of Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand,
Singapore, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Vietnam and the
Philippines.
"We have to prepare for the worst and hope for
the best," Indonesian Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar told
reporters.
"We are not going to delude ourselves that we are
going to wipe out all the haze. There will be some burning, some
haze."
Near-annual bouts of haze have made many people ill across a wide
area of Southeast Asia, cost local economies billions of dollars and
badly hit the tourism and airline sectors.