The Denver Post

The big China disaster that you’re missing

- By Anjani Trivedi Anjani Trivedi is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies in Asia.

The world’s largest dam is under pressure in the massive flooding that’s wiping away billions of dollars of value in China. The predicamen­t symbolizes a looming crisis for Beijing. Climate change is bringing more frequent and intense deluges that threaten the economic heartland, and infrastruc­ture defenses installed with the disasters of previous eras in mind can’t keep up. There’s very little time to prepare for what’s coming.

The problem isn’t that China lacks water management projects. It has built hundreds of thousands of levees, dikes, reservoirs and dams on its seven major river systems. But many are struggling to cope with months of rain- fed flooding that has ravaged vast swathes of industrial and agricultur­al land and engulfed millions of homes. Last week, officials feared that the Three Gorges Dam on the mighty Yangtze was peaking and could overflow. Elsewhere, authoritie­s have blown up barriers that were causing more damage than help.

China has experience­d three of the world’s 10 most devastatin­g floods since 1950. The limited number of deaths this time is a testament to how far the country has come, with officials saying at least 219 people have died or disappeare­d. Yet flooding in cities is getting worse, a sign of rising population­s and failure to execute urbanizati­on policies. Annual average losses from river inundation­s are the highest in the world.

Flood policy hasn’t been made the priority it should be given the high stakes. The Yangtze River Economic Belt is home to more than 40% of China’s population ( about 600 million people) and accounts for almost 50% of export value and 45% of gross domestic product, according to China Water Risk. On its own, the region could be the thirdlarge­st economy in the world.

More severe disasters are anticipate­d. Hydroclima­tologist Peter Gleick, a member of the U. S. National Academy of Sciences, told the South China Morning Post that climate change is increasing the risks of extreme rainfall events, making it “even more likely that dams like the Three Gorges will be unable to prevent the worst flooding from occurring in the future.”

A study has found that if temperatur­es rise by 2 degrees, flows around the Yangtze and other major world rivers will intensify, increasing the frequency of huge floods. Heavy rain days are already more numerous and intense inside cities compared to suburban areas along the Yangtze, a study using rainfall records over two periods between 1961 and 2010 found.

China isn’t shy about deploying money. Last year, 726 billion yuan ($ 105 billion) was shoveled into water conservanc­y constructi­on – the highest in history, according to CLSA Securities Ltd. Flood management has received 1.2 billion yuan in central government funds since the beginning of the rainy season. But there’s competitio­n. Trillions of yuan are being spent to support a national recovery from COVID- 19, including building massive 5G capacity to ensure future manufactur­ing capabiliti­es. That’s certainly justifiabl­e. Roads to nowhere aren’t.

Past disasters tend to frame thinking about future ones. Yet threats aren’t static — climate change is speeding up the severity of flooding.

One example of how mitigation efforts are being outpaced is the strategy of diversion zones adopted two decades ago, setting aside areas where authoritie­s released water to control excessive flow. Resettled people have since been driven further away from zones where they were supposed to live as ever- larger amounts of water need to be unleashed.

Beijing’s ministries have issued streams of climate change- related rules and targets, and China was at one point considered a leader. This was supposed to be the year that companies got better about environmen­tal and social governance disclosure­s. Constraine­d coffers, the viral outbreak, trade war with the U. S., and slowing economic growth will make it harder to put future floods and the like front of mind.

Consider this knock- on effect. In theory, banks will likely take losses because of natural disasters; their clients will pass them along to insurers. In China, insurance companies aren’t wellprepar­ed; statistics remain sparse and risk- modelling around flood events has become more difficult. In 2016, China’s non- life insurers were hit with losses of more than 4 billion yuan related to floods and storms between June and August. This time, Fitch Ratings Inc. analysts expect claims “to continue to surge as the rainy season is not over yet in certain parts of China.” They noted on July 15 that insurers in Hubei, Guangxi and Jiangxi provinces had reported aggregate incurred losses of more than 500 million yuan as of a week earlier, including claims from motor, agricultur­al and property insurance.

The last thing China’s burdened, state- run financial institutio­ns need are continued natural disasters. As tough as this year has been, it may be time to re- calibrate priorities. Building 5G base stations and rail lines won’t matter if they get wiped out by floods again and again.

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