COP21:
Planning and preparation can lessen the heavy human toll of natural disasters
linked to climate change, survivors tell UN summit delegates.
By
Tim Radford
[PARIS,
7 December, 2015] More than half a million people have perished in 15,000
climate-related disasters since 1995, at a cost of $US2.97 trillion, according
to new statistics released during the COP21 climate summit.
This
is the second such tally of devastation and death accumulated since COP1, the
first meeting two decades ago of world governments to confront the challenge of
climate change.
That
the latest Global Climate Risk Index, compiled by the organisation Germanwatch,
differs from the UN’s own recent estimates over the same two decades is partly
because compilers used different approaches and criteria, partly an indicator
of the innate difficulties of linking sustained suffering and loss to discrete
meteorological events, and partly because Germanwatch does not include all the
statistics from slowly-emerging events such as drought.
But
both sets of figures confirm that as global temperatures creep ever higher, as
a consequence of greater concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere,
in turn because of human activity, extreme events present ever greater hazards
in the form of storms, hail, tornadoes, storm surges, floods, landslides, ice storms,
wildfires and droughts.
In
2014, the worst three affected countries were Serbia – hit by catastrophic
floods that swept through southeast Europe that year – Afghanistan and
Bosnia-Herzegovina. The three worst affected countries over the two decades are
Honduras, Myanmar and Haiti, with the Philippines in fourth place, just above
Nicaragua and Bangladesh.
Lower target
The
Philippines, a vast archipelago of 7,000 large and small islands, is in the
path of around 20 to 25 typhoons a year that increasingly hit communities that
had once considered themselves relatively safe. The 190 nations attending COP21
have committed themselves to containing global warming to an average of 2°C
above pre-industrial levels, but the Philippines is one of a large group that
would prefer the world to aim for 1.5°C.
Tropical
cyclones are linked to sea surface temperatures and could become more intense,
more frequent or more extensive as temperatures rise, and tropical countries
with vast coastlines are inevitably more likely to be in the path of the coming
storms.
But
the nations most at hazard have, under a UN umbrella programme, also been
trying to anticipate the worst. And COP21 delegates heard that the Philippines
government, for the first time, has started to keep tally not just of the
statistics of catastrophe, but also of the disasters that did not happen.
Attitudes
to hazard have changed. What had once been the country’s national disaster
agency co-ordinating council is now a national disaster risk management
council.
Raymund
Liboro, the Philippines assistant secretary for climate change and disaster
risk reduction, told the conference: “While we consider ourselves as
vulnerable, we do not consider ourselves helpless.”
One
case in point was Typhoon Koppu, the thirteenth tropical cyclone to hit the
nation in 2015. Winds reached 240 km an hour, prodigious quantities of rain
were dumped on the hills, and in one region more than 1,000 millimetres of rain
fell in 24 hours. It triggered a huge flow of debris that buried three
townships.
Communities saved
In
2012, during a similar storm, more than 1,000 people died. But although Typhoon
Koppu in October dislodged 41 million cubic metres of rock, rubble and forest
from the mountainsides, it killed nobody. Forewarned, the authorities had
evacuated all three communities and saved 7,000 families.
So
the climate risk index and other sources of information served not just as a
league table of human suffering, but also as an indicator of levels of future risk
and a reminder that meteorological hazard now bears the fingerprint of climate
change.
With
good information, Mr Liboro said, countries could begin to cope, mitigate,
adapt and survive. “Behind those numbers are actual lives,” he said. “We
consider ourselves already survivors of climate change, and survivors have
stories to tell.”
–
Climate News Network
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