The Independent

UN launches $3bn extreme weather warning system

- LOUISE BOYLE SENIOR CLIMATE CORRESPOND­ENT, NEW YORK

An early warning system for increasing­ly extreme and dangerous weather has been launched at Cop27 to alert countries to impending threats.

The new Early Warnings for All initiative will reach everyone on Earth and will cost around $3bn (£2.6bn) to run over the next

five years, according to the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on (WMO), the UN body spearheadi­ng the programme.

Recorded disasters are increasing at a rapid pace and becoming ever more extreme. This year alone has seen catastroph­ic flooding in Pakistan and west and central Africa, crippling drought in South Asia, and heatwaves and wildfires across Europe. The US state of Florida was devastated by Hurricane Ian, a few weeks after Puerto Rico was slammed by Fiona. Yet, half of countries do not have early warning systems and even fewer have frameworks that link up early warnings and emergency plans, leaving their communitie­s little time to prepare or escape.

The countries least like to have synched-up plans are those in lesser developed countries and developing small island states. The UN secretary general Antonio Guterres told the gathering in Sharm el-Sheikh yesterday that it would cost the equivalent of 50 cents per person annually for the next five years to develop a system to reach everyone on Earth, with those most at-risk focused on first.

“Rising greenhouse gas emissions are supercharg­ing extreme weather events across the planet. These increasing calamities cost lives and hundreds of billions of dollars in loss and damage. Three times more people are displaced by climate disasters than war. Half of humanity is already in the danger zone,” the UN chief said. “We must invest equally in adaptation and resilience. That includes the informatio­n that allows us to anticipate storms, heatwaves, floods and droughts.”

The vast sum is dwarfed by the benefits, the UN says, and will cover strategies including public informatio­n, forecastin­g and communicat­ion of early warnings. It also noted that early warning systems are “low-hanging fruit” among the countless plans that are needed to adapt to climate change. The Global Commission on Adaptation found that spending $800m on such systems in developing countries would avoid losses of $3 to $16bn per year.

The plan was drawn up by WMO and partners and supported by a joint statement signed by 50 countries. “Early warnings save lives and provide vast economic benefits. Just 24 hours’ notice of an impending hazardous event can cut the ensuing damage by 30 per cent,” said WMO secretary-general Petteri Taalas.

Want your views to be included in The Independen­t Daily Edition letters page? Email us by tapping here letters@independen­t.co.uk. Please include your address

 ?? ?? A house l ies in the mud after being washed away by Hurricane Fiona in Puerto Rico (AP)
A house l ies in the mud after being washed away by Hurricane Fiona in Puerto Rico (AP)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom