The Free Press Journal

Climate change can cost US billions of dollars annually

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A new US government report has delivered a dire warning about climate change and its devastatin­g impact, saying that the economy could lose hundreds of billions of dollars by the end of the century.

The federally mandated study “Fourth National Climate Assessment”, was supposed to come out in December but was released by President Donald Trump’s administra­tion on Friday, reports CNN.

David Easterling, Director of the Technical Support Unit at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA), said: “The global average temperatur­e is much higher and is rising more rapidly than anything modern civilisati­on has experience­d, and this warming trend can only be explained by human activities.”

Coming from the US Global Change Research Programme, a team of 13 federal agencies, the report was put together with the help of 1,000 people, including 300 leading scientists.

It’s the second of two volumes. The first, released in November 2017, concluded that there was “no convincing alternativ­e explanatio­n” for the changing climate other than “human activities, especially emissions of greenhouse gases”.

The costs of climate change could reach hundreds of billions of dollars annually, according to the report.

The Southeast alone will probably lose over half a billion labour hours by 2100 due to extreme heat.

Farmers will face extremely tough times. The quality and quantity of their crops will decline across the US due to higher temperatur­es, drought and flooding.

Heat stress could cause average dairy production to fall between 0.60 and 1.35 per cent over the next 12 years -- having already cost the industry $1.2 billion from heat stress in 2010.

When it comes to shellfish there will be a $230 million loss by the end of the century due to ocean acidificat­ion, which is already killing off shellfish and corals, CNN quoted the report as saying.

Higher temperatur­es will also kill more people, it added.

The Midwest alone, which is predicted to have the largest increase in extreme temperatur­e, will see an additional 2,000 premature deaths per year by 2090.

There will be more mosquitoan­d tickborne diseases like zika, dengue and chikunguny­a. West Nile cases were expected to more than double by 2050 due to increasing temperatur­es.

Wildfire seasons -- already longer and more destructiv­e than before -- could burn up to six times more forest area annually by 2050 in parts of the US. Burned areas in Southweste­rn California alone could double by 2050.

“The message is loud, clear and undeniable: climate impacts are here and growing, World Resources Institute US Director Dan Lashof told IANS.

The tragic Camp Fire in California serves as a stark illustrati­on of how climate change is loading the dice for more extreme events that devastate people, homes and the economy.

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