The Asian Age

Climate disasters cost $ 2.25tn

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Geneva, Oct. 10: The economic cost of climate- related disasters hit $ 2.25 trillion over the last two decades, an increase of more than 150 per cent compared to the previous 20 years, the UN said on Wednesday.

The United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction ( UNISDR) noted that “climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of extreme weather events” such as floods and storms.

Between 1978- 1997, total losses for climate- related disasters was $ 895 billion, UNISDR said in a report based on data compiled by the Centre for Research on the Epidemiolo­gy of Disasters ( CRED) at the Universite Catholique de Louvain in Belgium.

But between 1998- 2017 that figure hit $ 2.25 trillion, the report said, listing the US, China, Japan and India as the countries where financial toll has been highest.

The findings were released as Michael, a Category Four hurricane, rumbled towards the Gulf Coast of Florida, in the latest storm to threaten vast destructio­n across the eastern US. “The report’s analysis makes it clear that economic losses from extreme weather events are unsustaina­ble and a major brake on eradicatin­g poverty in hazard exposed parts of the world,” the UN secretary general’s special representa­tive for disaster reduction, Mami Mizutori, said in a statement.

UNISDR counted the number of climate- related disasters between 1998- 2017 at over 6,600.

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