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Regional News Haiti tops index of nations worst-hit by extreme weather in 2016

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BONN, Germany, (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Haiti, which was hit last year by its strongest hurricane in 50 years, has been ranked the country worst-affected by extreme weather in 2016, in an index published yesterday.

Zimbabwe, which suffered severe drought followed by floods, came second. Fiji, recovering from the strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded in the island nation, was ranked third in the Climate Risk Index published annually by research group Germanwatc­h.

Fiji is president of this year’s U.N. climate talks, where small island states are pushing for urgent action to curb planetwarm­ing emissions, which are expected to bring worse storms, floods, droughts and rising sea levels.

“When Tropical Cyclone Winston hit Fiji, more than half our population was displaced and disturbed,” said Joshua Wycliffe, Fiji’s permanent secretary for local government, housing and environmen­t.

“And there’s not been a day when we’ve gone to work not knowing when another cyclone is happening,” he said on the sidelines of the Nov. 6-17 Bonn talks.

When a storm can severely impact the economy and health of a relatively large island state like Fiji, “you can imagine the devastatio­n it can do to a smaller island nation”, he added.

Between 1997 and 2016, more than 520,000 people died in over 11,000 extreme weather events including storms, floods and heat waves worldwide, the index said. The economic damages amounted to about $3.16 trillion, according to Germanwatc­h.

Nine of the ten worst-affected nations in that period were developing countries, with Honduras, Haiti and Myanmar suffering most, the index showed.

“But industrial­ised nations must also do more to address climate impacts that they are beginning to feel at home,” said David Eckstein of Germanwatc­h, one of the authors of the index.

The United States, for example, ranks 10th in the index for 2016, with 267 deaths and $47.7 billion in damages caused by extreme weather, he said.

The index does not take into account slow-onset climate risks such as rising sea levels or melting glaciers.

Some countries like Haiti, India, Sri Lanka and Vietnam are repeatedly hit by extreme weather and have no time to recover fully, Germanwatc­h noted.

“Especially in smaller states, the consequenc­es are hardly bearable,” said Eckstein. Those losses underline how important it is to help poor countries adapt to climate change and deal with the damage caused by extreme weather, he said.

“Especially at a climate summit under Fijian presidency, these issues have to receive the highest priority,” he added.

 ??  ?? Joshua Wycliffe,
Joshua Wycliffe,

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