Hindustan Times (East UP)

Amphan led to $14 bn losses

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

AMPHAN IS ESTIMATED TO BE THE COSTLIEST TROPICAL CYCLONE ON RECORD IN NORTH INDIAN OCEAN, THE WMO REPORT SAID

NEW DELHI: Super cyclone Amphan, which made landfall in the Sunderbans near the India-Bangladesh border in May this year, is estimated to be the costliest tropical cyclone on record in the North Indian Ocean with economic losses amounting to about $14 billion, according to the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on’s (WMO) provisiona­l report on the State of Global Climate released on Wednesday.

The cyclone caused largescale evacuation of residents of coastal areas in India and Bangladesh where 129 lives were lost in the cyclone.

Amphan reached the category 5 equivalent intensity (a wind speed greater than 156 mph, according to the UK Met Office) while over the Bay of Bengal and weakened before landfall to a category 2 storm but led to extensive damage in Kolkata and surroundin­g areas.

Around 2.4 million people were displaced in India, mainly in West Bengal and Odisha, and 2.5 million in Bangladesh. While many returned soon afterwards, damage to more than 2.8 million homes resulted in displaceme­nt of thousands, the WMO statement added.

This year is also very likely to be one of the three warmest years on record globally since temperatur­e record-keeping began in 1850, according to the WMO report.The global mean temperatur­e for January to October 2020 was around 1.2 degree Celsius above pre-industrial levels, dangerousl­y close to breaching the 1.5°C threshold that the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said will mark a menacing milestone in the warming of the planet.

Data sets used by WMO suggest that 2020 is the second warmest year on record, preceded only by 2016 and followed by 2019. The exact rankings for each data set could change once data for the entire year are available.A 1.5°C rise in average temperatur­e over pre-industrial times is the threshold beyond which many regions, including India, will record extreme temperatur­es; increases in frequency, intensity, and/or amount of heavy rainfall and an increase in intensity or frequency of droughts in some regions, IPCC warned last year in a special report titled Global Warming of 1.5 Degrees.

At a global mean temperatur­e of 1.2°C above pre-industrial levels in the first 10 months, this year has already been dominated by extreme climate events, including excessive heat, wildfires and floods and a record-breaking Atlantic hurricane season, which added to the crisis posed by the Covid-19 pandemic. Heavy rain and flooding affected the Sahel, the Greater Horn of Africa, India and neighbouri­ng areas, China, Korea and Japan, and parts of south-east Asia at various times of the year, the report said.

Over 2,000 deaths were reported during the monsoon in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Afghanista­n and Myanmar. India experience­d one of the two wettest monsoon seasons since 1994. August was the wettest month on record for Pakistan

The warmest region this year was northern Asia, particular­ly the Siberian Arctic, where temperatur­es were more than 5°C above average. Siberian heat was at its peak in June, when it reached 38°C at Verkhoyans­k on June 20, the highest known temperatur­e anywhere north of the Arctic Circle.

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