Yorkshire Post

Extreme weather ‘costing billions’

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

EXTREME FLOODS, droughts, wildfires and storms linked to climate change have cost thousands of lives and billions of pounds this year, a report has warned.

Among the most expensive disasters to hit the world this year were Hurricanes Florence and Michael, which struck the US and parts of Central America and the Caribbean, the report from Christian Aid said.

There were also heatwaves and drought in Europe, where record temperatur­es in the UK were made 30 times more likely by climate change which caused wildfires and cost lives, according to the Met Office,

Kerala, India, was hit by the worst floods for more than 80 years, Japan had a summer of extremes, and California suffered wildfires including the Camp Fire which was the state’s deadliest ever.

Experts warn the unpreceden­ted extremes “are the face of climate change” and called for rapid cuts to carbon emissions to prevent increasing­ly destructiv­e weather.

The report by Christian Aid, Counting the Cost: a year of climate breakdown, identifies ten of the most destructiv­e droughts, floods, fires, typhoons and hurricanes in 2018, each of which it said had caused damage of more than $1bn (£790m).

All of the billion-dollar disasters are linked with climate change caused by humans, the report argues.

In some cases scientific studies have shown that climate change made the particular event more likely or stronger, such as Hurricane Florence and Europe’s heatwave summer.

In other cases it has been the result of shifts in weather patterns, such as higher temperatur­es and reduced rainfall which have made widespread fires more likely.

While the report focuses on the financial cost of global weather extremes, it also warns the cost to lives and livelihood­s is even higher.

Dr Kat Kramer, Christian Aid’s global climate lead, said: “Climate change is something still often talked about as a future problem, not least because we know the consequenc­es of the warming climate are so devastatin­g and don’t want to face up to what is already happening.

“This report shows that for many people, climate change is having devastatin­g impacts on their lives and livelihood­s right now.

“We must respond to the warning these disasters are giving us and avert more and worse ones, by accelerati­ng the transition to a zero carbon economy: one run on clean, renewable energy that will deliver a safer climate for everyone.”

Renowned climate scientist Dr Michael Mann, from Penn State University in the United States, said: “The impacts of climate change are no longer subtle.

“We are seeing them play out now, on our television screens, newspaper headlines and social media feeds.

“The unpreceden­ted floods, droughts, heatwaves, wildfires and superstorm­s we’ve seen in recent years – they are the face of climate change.”

The climatolog­ist and science writer added: “The world’s weather is becoming more extreme before our eyes – the only thing that can stop this destructiv­e trend from escalating is a rapid fall in carbon emissions.”

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