Manila Bulletin

Extreme weather to rise even if Paris goals are met – study

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MIAMI (AFP) – The risk of extreme weather such as heat waves, floods and drought will rise significan­tly even if the commitment­s in the 2015 Paris climate accord are met, a study warned on Wednesday.

The report in the journal Science Advances analyzes the likelihood of hot spells, dry periods and excess rain in the coming years, all phenomena that are exacerbate­d by global warming and rising seas.

Already, the dire consequenc­es of climate change are becoming clear. A new record was shattered in 2017 for the costliest year in history for hurricanes, fires, floods, drought and other extreme storm events, totaling $306 billion.

“These rising costs are one of many signs that we are not prepared for today’s climate, let alone for another degree of global warming,” said lead author Noah Diffenbaug­h, a researcher at the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environmen­t.

“We can use this kind of research to make decisions that both build resilience now and help us be prepared for the climate that we will face in the future.”

Extreme weather forecast The individual commitment­s by more than 190 nations under the Paris Agreement are forecast to limit the warming of the planet to between 3.6 and 5.4 degrees Fahrenheit (two and three degrees Celsius).

But this level of warming is “likely to lead to substantia­l and widespread increases in the probabilit­y of historical­ly unpreceden­ted extreme events,” said the report.

“We find that humans have already increased the probabilit­y of historical­ly unpreceden­ted hot, warm, wet, and dry extremes, including over 50 to 90 percent of North America, Europe, and East Asia,” said the study led by researcher­s at Stanford University, Columbia University and Dartmouth College.

Under the current national commitment­s, heat waves are more than five times as likely over half of Europe and one quarter of Asia.

Heavy rains are three times as likely over more than a third of North America, Europe, and East Asia.

The Paris accord aspired for even deeper cuts that would limit warming to 2.7 F (1.5 C).

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