The Hindu (Erode)

Uncertain times

Global monitors have warned that 2024 is shaping up to be the hottest year on record, marked by climate extremes; the vulnerable population is the most affected

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In a world where global warming and climate change have become buzzwords, everything seems to be in a flux. There’s either a deluge or a drought. Disasters like forest fires and floods seem to be increasing in frequency, pushing vulnerable people to the edge.

This month, extensive flooding impacted the Central Asian regions of Kazakhstan and Russia, specifical­ly in the Ural Mountains and Siberia. The Ural river, which rises in the Ural mountains and flows through Kazakhstan into the Caspian Sea, burst through embankment dams in the Urals city of Orsk on April 5 and flooded parts of the city of Orenburg.

At least 12,000 people in Russia are recorded as having been evacuated. In Kazakhstan, more than 97,000 people have been evacuated. The worst hit areas mostly border Russia and are crossed by rivers flowing from or to Russia.

In a 2009 research commission­ed by the U.S. National Intelligen­ce Council on the impact of climate change on Russia to 2030, the authors said the rise in temperatur­es would lead to a series of complex issues for Russia.

Among them were the increased frequency of extreme climatic events including heavy rain, fires in Siberian peatlands and more frequent flooding of Russia's Arctic rivers due to heavy rain and earlier breakup of river ice.

The European Union's climate change monitoring service recently said that March 2024 was the warmest on record. Each of the last 10 months ranked as the world’s hottest on record, compared with the correspond­ing month in previous years, the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) said in a monthly bulletin. The 12 months ending with March also ranked as the planet's hottest ever recorded 12month period, C3S said.

Extreme weather and exceptiona­l temperatur­es have wreaked havoc this year. Wildfires affecting Mexico have destroyed over 3,000 hectares of forested areas. Heatwaves in Vietnam have caused severe drought in central Ninh Thuan province, badly affecting vegetation and lifestock.

Closer home, the India Meteorolog­ical Department has said the country will see more than the average number of heatwave days this year between April and June. Heat waves can be lethal as they affect the ability to breathe, making the old and young particular­ly vulnerable.

Benjamin Horton, director of the Earth Observator­y of Singapore where natural phenomena such as climate change are studied, said three factors determine heat waves; El Nino, a natural, temporary and occasional warming of part of the Pacific, an increase in global temperatur­es and humaninduc­ed climate change.

Text: Agencies

 ?? AP GETTY IMAGES AFP ?? Danger zone: A firefighte­r walks by train tracks near a paper factory affected by a forest fire in Veracruz, Mexico on March 26.
AP GETTY IMAGES AFP Danger zone: A firefighte­r walks by train tracks near a paper factory affected by a forest fire in Veracruz, Mexico on March 26.

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