UN Climate Change Report says Poor Will Suffer

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    UN Climate Change Report says Poor Will Suffer

       
    April 2007 - The impacts of future 
    climate change will be mixed across regions of the world, with 
    more than a billion people at risk of increased water stress 
    and hundreds of millions at risk of sea-level rise, but there 
    will be higher crop yields in some areas, finds a new global 
    scientific assessment released today. 
    Yet the report finds it "very likely" that all regions will 
    experience either declines in net benefits or increases in net 
    costs for temperature rises greater than about 2 to 3 degrees 
    C (3.6 to 5.4 degrees F.) 
    More than 2,500 scientific expert reviewers from around the 
    world spent six years working on the assessment issued today 
    by Working Group II of the Intergovermental Panel on Climate 
    Change, IPCC. The report, "Impacts, Adaptation and 
    Vulnerability," was adopted this week in a line-by-line review 
    by the governments of 131 countries. 
    "It is the poorest of the poor in the world, and this includes 
    poor people even in prosperous societies, who are going to be 
    the worst hit," IPCC Chairman Rajendra Pachauri told 
    journalists at the release of the report's summary for 
    policymakers in Brussels. "This does become a global 
    responsibility in my view," he said. 
    Dr. Rajendra Pachauri of India chairs the Intergovermental 
    Panel on Climate Change. 
    The assessment details current scientific understanding of the 
    impacts of climate change on natural, managed and human 
    systems, the capacity of these systems to adapt and their 
    vulnerability. 
    The resilience of many ecosystems is likely to be exceeded 
    this century by an unprecedented combination of climate 
    change; associated disturbances such as flooding, drought, 
    wildfire, insects, and ocean acidification; and other global 
    change drivers such as land use change, pollution, and 
    over-exploitation of resources, the report finds. 
    About 20 to 30 percent of plant and animal species assessed so 
    far are likely to be at increased risk of extinction if 
    increases in global average temperature exceed 1.5 to 2.5 
    degrees C (2.7 to 4.5 degrees F), the report finds. 
    The mountainous areas of Europe will face much greater species 
    losses, "in some areas up to 60 percent under high emission 
    scenarios by 2080." 
    The report builds on past IPCC assessments including, the 
    Working Group I report released in February that confirmed 
    with 100 percent confidence that global warming is occurring 
    and with 90 percent confidence that it is due to human 
    activities. 
    The IPCC was established in 1988 by the World Meteorological 
    Organization and the UN Environment Programme and is open to 
    all their member countries. 
    The IPCC does not conduct research on its own but reviews and 
    assesses the most recent scientific, technical and 
    socio-economic information on climate change. The statements 
    presented in this assessment are based on data sets that cover 
    the period since 1970. 
    "For the first time, we are no longer arm-waving with models - 
    this is empirical data, we can actually measure it," Martin 
    Parry, co-chairman of IPCC Working Group II, told reporters in 
    Brussels today. 
    Martin Parry of the UK is co-chair of the IPCC Working Group 
    that produced the report issued today. He is director of the 
    Jackson Environment Institute and professor of environmental 
    science at the University of East Anglia. 
    Improved climate models and expanded observations, data and 
    information have enabled the IPCC to increase the level of 
    confidence in the attribution of warming to human-induced 
    increases in greenhouse gas concentrations, the report says, 
    but it is also frank about limitations and gaps in 
    information. 
    "Limitations and gaps prevent more complete attribution of the 
    causes of observed system responses to anthropogenic warming," 
    the report acknowledges, listing three factors. 
    First, the available analyses are limited in the number of 
    systems and locations considered. Second, natural temperature 
    variability is larger at the regional than the global scale, 
    which affects identification of changes due to external 
    forcing. Third, at the regional scale other factors, such as 
    land-use change, pollution, and invasive species, are 
    influential. 
    That said, the assessment indicates that catastrophic effects 
    of the warming climate are already in train. 
    By 2020, between 75 and 250 million people in Africa are 
    projected to be exposed to an increase of water stress due to 
    climate change, the report predicts. 
    By mid-century, annual average river runoff and water 
    availability are projected to increase by 10-40 percent at 
    high latitudes and in some wet tropical areas, and decrease by 
    10-30 percent over some dry regions at mid-latitudes and in 
    the dry tropics, some of which are presently water stressed 
    areas. 
    Drought-affected areas will likely increase in extent. Heavy 
    precipitation events, which are very likely to increase in 
    frequency, will augment flood risk. 
    Over the course of the century, water supplies stored in 
    glaciers and snow cover are projected to decline, reducing 
    water availability in regions supplied by meltwater from major 
    mountain ranges, where more than one-sixth of the world 
    population currently lives. 
    An early end to the short rain in 2005 left many farmers in 
    the southern Ethiopia without hope of a harvest and led to an 
    increase in malnutrition among children. 
    If temperatures rise more than 2.5 degrees C, the report 
    forsees major changes in ecosystem structure and function, 
    species' ecological interactions, and species' geographic 
    ranges, with "predominantly negative consequences" for 
    biodiversity, and water and food supply. 
    Crop productivity is projected to increase slightly at mid to 
    high latitudes for local mean temperature increases of up to 1 
    to 3 degrees C depending on the crop, and then decrease beyond 
    that in some regions. 
    At lower latitudes, especially seasonally dry and tropical 
    regions, crop productivity is projected to decrease for even 
    small local temperature increases, which would increase risk 
    of hunger. 
    Globally, the potential for food production is projected to 
    increase with increases in local average temperature over a 
    range of 1 to 3 degrees C, but above this it is projected to 
    decrease. 
    Globally, commercial timber productivity rises modestly with 
    climate change in the short- to medium-term, with large 
    regional variability despite the global trend. 
    Coasts are projected to be exposed to increasing risks, 
    including coastal erosion, due to climate change and sea-level 
    rise and the effect will be worsened by increasing human 
    pressures on coastal areas. 
    By the 2080s, many millions more people are projected to be 
    flooded every year due to sea-level rise, the report predicts. 
    The numbers affected will be largest in the mega-deltas of 
    Asia and Africa while small islands are especially vulnerable.
    Holding a vessel for potable water, women swim through 
    contaminated flood water in the low-lying Asian country of 
    Bangladesh. 
    The most vulnerable industries, settlements and societies are 
    those in coastal and river flood plains, those whose economies 
    are linked with climate-senvironment newsitive resources, and those in 
    areas prone to extreme weather events, especially where rapid 
    urbanization is occurring. 
    Glacier melt in the Himalayas is projected to increase 
    flooding and avalanches and affect water resources within the 
    next two to three decades. This will be followed by decreased 
    river flows as the glaciers recede. 
    Freshwater availability in Central, South, East and Southeast 
    Asia, particularly in large river basins, is projected to 
    decrease due to climate change which, along with population 
    growth and increasing demand arising from higher standards of 
    living, could adversely affect more than a billion people by 
    the 2050s. 
    Projected climate change-related exposures are likely to 
    affect the health status of millions of people through 
    increases in malnutrition, heat waves, floods, storms, fires 
    and droughts; the increased frequency of cardio-respiratory 
    diseases due to higher concentrations of ground level ozone 
    related to climate change; and, the migration of some 
    infectious diseases. 
    "Climate change is having impacts on natural systems - plants, 
    animals, ecosystems and human systems," Sharon Hays, leader of 
    the U.S. IPCC delegation, said in a news conference call from 
    Brussels. "Climate change is clearly a global challenge and we 
    all recognize that it requires global solutions. Not all 
    regions of the world have the same capacity to adapt." 
    In Congress, House Science and Technology Committee Chairman 
    Bart Gordon, a Tennessee Democrat, called the assessment, "a 
    powerful and sobering message." 
    "For the first time, the world's top scientists are able to 
    confidently attribute changes in a wide variety of ecosystems 
    in all parts of the world to human-induced global warming," 
    Gordon said. "We can neutralize some of these by better 
    adapting our society to these changes. We should identify our 
    vulnerable communities and begin working to reduce these 
    vulnerabilities." 
    UK Environment and Climate Change Minister Ian Pearson said, 
    "This report provides further evidence of why all countries 
    need to work urgently to agree a global deal to combat climate 
    change. People are already being affected, and if we don't act 
    now millions more will suffer." 
    "Reducing emissions is not enough," Pearson said, "In the UK, 
    for example, buildings and transport will have to be better 
    able to cope with the higher temperatures and more extreme 
    weather that climate change will bring." 
    "The report clearly shows that climate change will affect 
    everyone on an individual level," said Pearson. "It's not just 
    a problem for governments or big companies." He said the Blair 
    government "will be increasing our engagement with people 
    throughout the UK including an online CO2 calculator, a major 
    press and TV ad campaign, and a Citizenvironment news Summit that will 
    engage directly with the public on this important issue." 
    Internationally, said Pearson, the UK has convened a debate 
    this month in the UN Security Council "to try to help build a 
    shared understanding of the implications climate change has 
    for stability and security." 
    EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas said the report 
    confirms the correctness of the EU's environmental policy. In 
    March, the 27 member states pledged the reduction of carbon 
    dioxide emissions by 20 percent before 2020. 
    The report produced a storm of warnings from environmental 
    groups - all calling for immediate action while there still is 
    time to avert some of the most disastrous consequences of 
    global warming. 
    "There's no escaping the facts: global warming will bring 
    hunger, floods and water shortages," said Hans Verolme of the 
    global conservation organization WWF. "Poor countries that 
    bear least responsibility will suffer most - and they have no 
    money to respond - but people should also be aware that even 
    the richer countries risk enormous damage." 
    "Doing nothing is not an option," Verolme said. "On the 
    contrary it will have disastrous consequences." 
    "The irritating thing is that we have all the tools at hand to 
    limit climate change and save the world from the worst 
    impacts," says Dr. Lara Hansen, chief scientist of WWF's 
    Global Climate Change Programme. "The IPCC makes it clear that 
    there is a window of opportunity but that it's closing fast. 
    The world needs to use its collective brains to think ahead 
    for the next 10 years and work together to prevent this 
    crisis." 
    Friends of the Earth International's Climate Campaigner, 
    Catherine Pearce, said, "It is now clear that we are to blame 
    for the last 50 years of warming, and this is already causing 
    adverse changes to our planet. Unless we take action to reduce 
    emissions now, far worse is yet to come, condemning millions 
    in the poorest parts of the world to loss of lives, 
    livelihoods and homes. 
    "Climate change is no longer just an environmental issue," 
    said Pearce. "It is a looming humanitarian catastrophe, 
    threatening ultimately our global security and survival." 
    







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