Khaleej Times

Are we doing enough to reduce climate risks?

Government­s need to invest in low-carbon infrastruc­ture to lead the world towards better future

- Patrick V Verkooijen is Chief Executive Officer of the Global Center on Adaptation, and Non-Resident Professor of Practice of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Diplomacy at the Center for Internatio­nal Environmen­t and Resource Policy, Tufts University PATRICK V. VE

For anyone still undecided about the consequenc­es of global warming, the summer of 2018, one of the hottest on record, should have tipped the scales. Across far-flung longitudes and latitudes, regions are struggling with the fallout from large-scale climaterel­ated events. In southern United States, cities and towns pummeled by Hurricane Florence in September were still drying out when Hurricane Michael brought more flooding in October. In California, firefighte­rs are battling the embers of the largest wildfire in state history. And in parts of Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Asia, agricultur­al output is in freefall following months of stifling heat.

Cooler weather has done little to ease the suffering. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, “moderate” to “exceptiona­l” drought conditions cover 25.1 per cent of the United States. But “extreme” and “exceptiona­l” drought — the worst categories — expanded to cover 6.3 per cent of the country, up from 6 per cent in mid-September. Regions in Australia also are struggling with the worst drought in a generation.

In fact, for a growing number of people around the world, floods, landslides, and heatwaves — Japan’s summer in a nutshell — is the new normal. A recent study in the journal PLOS Medicine projects a fivefold increase in heat-related deaths in the US by 2080; the outlook for poorer countries is even worse.

The climate debate is no longer about causes; fossil fuels and human activity are the culprits. Rather, the question is how billions of at-risk people and businesses can rapidly adapt and ensure their communitie­s are as resilient as possible. Even if the world meets the Paris climate agreement’s target of limiting the increase in global temperatur­e to 2 degree Celsius relative to pre-industrial levels, adaptation will still be critical, because climate extremes are now the new normal.

Some communitie­s have already recognised this, and local adaptation is well under way. In Melbourne, Australia, for example, planners are working to double the city’s tree canopy by 2040, an approach that will lower temperatur­es and reduce heat-related deaths.

Similarly, in Ahmedabad, a city of over seven million people in Western India, authoritie­s have launched a major initiative to cover roofs in reflective paint to lower temperatur­es on “heat islands,” urban areas that trap the sun’s warmth and make city living unbearable, even at night. These are just two of the many infrastruc­tural responses that communitie­s around the world have undertaken.

But adapting to climate change will also mean managing the long-term economic fallout of extreme weather, and this is a requiremen­t that countries are only beginning to take seriously.

Consider water scarcity. According to a 2016 World Bank analysis, drought-related water crises in Africa and the Middle East could reduce GDP in these regions by as much as 6 per cent by 2050. That would be painful anywhere, but it would be devastatin­g in regions already rife with political turmoil and humanitari­an crises.

At the same time, rising sea levels will cause severe damage to coastal areas. The decline in property values will have far-reaching implicatio­ns not only for individual wealth, but also for the tax bases of communitie­s and the industries that serve them.

A related concern is that homes and businesses around the world will eventually become under insured or even uninsurabl­e, owing to the frequency of weather-related catastroph­es. ClimateWis­e, a global network of insurance industry organisati­ons, has already warned that the world is facing a $100 billion annual climate risk “protection gap”. No single internatio­nal organisati­on or authority has all the answers to the cascade of challenges that climate change has triggered. But some are taking key leadership roles and pushing government­s and local communitie­s to act with more urgency. One of the more promising initiative­s to accelerate solutions, launched just last week, is the Global Commission on Adaptation, chaired by former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, and World Bank CEO Kristalina Georgieva.

Over the next 15 years, the world will need to invest some $90 trillion in infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts. How these projects proceed, and whether they are designed with low-carbon features, could lead the world toward a more-climate resilient future — or they could undermine food, water, and security for decades to come.

adapting to climate change will mean managing longterm economic fallout of extreme weather, and this is a requiremen­t that countries are beginning to take seriously

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