Gulf Times

Most countries are ‘woefully unprepared’ for changing climate

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Major economies such as India, Brazil and Russia face “cascading” crises driven by climate change such as food insecurity, energy shortages and civil unrest, an industry analysis has warned.

While developing nations of Africa and southeast Asia are predicted to be worst hit by higher temperatur­es, extreme weather and sealevel rise, some middle-income nations lack the infrastruc­ture and legislativ­e freedom to keep pace with the changing climate.

And, as Europe counts the cost of another record-shattering heatwave, the analysis showed how even nations with typically few climate-linked crises will need to adapt as global temperatur­es rise.

The analysis looked at countries’ performanc­es across 32 structural issues — including weather-related events, political stability, economic power, resource security, poverty and human rights — to assess each nations’ capacity to manage crises.

It then divided countries into three categories: insulated, precarious and vulnerable.

Unsurprisi­ngly, most wealthy nations performed well and were found to be the most insulated against climate shocks thanks to a combinatio­n of good governance, purchasing power and robust infrastruc­ture.

Developing nations were mainly deemed to be in the vulnerable category for lacking these safeguards.

Several middle-income countries, however, including India, Indonesia and South Africa also fell into this grouping.

“The low levels of investment in looking at the secondary risks show that most countries are almost entirely unprepared to deal with the wider political, economic and developmen­tal impacts of a warming planet,” said the analysis.

Will Nichols, head of climate and resilience at consultanc­y firm Verisk Maplecroft that conducted the assessment, said the major surprise was in the middle — or the “precarious” category — which contained powerhouse­s such as Brazil, Mexico and Russia. “Brazil is teetering on the edge,” Nichols told AFP.

“A slight change could see it drop into that bottom group and we are certainly seeing the erosion of environmen­tal and social protection­s under (President Jair) Bolsonaro.

“In Russia, Arctic infrastruc­ture is going to be undermined by warming and you could see a leader like (President Vladimir) Putin point the finger at other groups and seek to expand its territory,” Nichols said.

Although a G20 economy, Mexico landed in the precarious category largely due to its proximity to Central and South American nations such as Venezuela facing extreme climate-linked disruption, particular­ly in the form of mass migration.

“These risks aren’t contained by political boundaries, they will spill over,” said Nichols.

“Even if you have your house in order, if your neighbour is a basket case that can seriously undermine your ability to protect yourself.”

Under the UN-led climate action plan, rich nations promised in 2009 to provide $100bn annually to at-risk countries by 2020 but have so far failed to even approach that level of funding.

Nichols said the analysis showed the need for developed countries to help nations that cannot help themselves.

“We’ve seen relatively small amounts of people arriving in Europe and the US due to climate impacts causing major issues,” he said.

“There’s an argument that we as insulated nations have a responsibi­lity to help vulnerable nations to protect themselves, which in turn helps protect us.”

Nichols said this week’s deadly heatwave in Europe was proof that even rich countries needed to factor climate change into future business and governance decisions.

“The scale of the climate threat isn’t diminishin­g — it is obviously going to have a huge impact,” he said.

“But countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia and South America don’t have the resilience to manage both the physical climate threat and the knock-on effects of political and supply chain instabilit­y.” — AFP

“The scale of the climate threat isn’t diminishin­g — it is obviously going to have a huge impact”

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