Changing climate - World Bank warning to South Asia for disasters
Updated: Jun 25, 2013 03:59:38pm
The new World Bank report, “Turn Down the Heat II – Climate Extremes, Regional Impact and the Case for Resilience,” launched last week utilizes peer reviewed literature along with computer modelling to simulate climate change effects in the vulnerable regions of South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Southeast Asia, which are home to the greatest number of the poor and most climate change vulnerable citizens.
The World Bank warning comes even as India is battling the devastating floods in the state of Uttarakhand.
South Asia’s expected population increase to 2.2 billion by 2050 from 1.6 billion people in 2010 will add additional stress on already stretched food and energy resources and production. The potential change in the regularity and impact of the all-important monsoon could precipitate a major crisis in the region. In India, for example, an extreme wet monsoon that currently has a chance of occurring only once in 100 years is projected to occur every 10 years by the end of the century. Events like the devastating Pakistan floods of 2010, which affected more than 20 million people, could become more commonplace.
“We have a moral imperative to protect the most vulnerable people, standing in the path of climate-driven hardship. The report is a warning, and we have a duty to respond,” said the World Bank South Asia Vice President, Isabel Guerrero.
The region is already experiencing a warming climate that can be seen in warmer periods in India, increasing variability of the monsoon rainfall, intense rainfalls and an increase in the number of droughts. Droughts will especially affect north-western India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
In Nepal, glaciers will melt faster and threaten people’s access to water and energy supplies from hydropower.
Additionally, climate changes are not uniformly spread around the world; for example, the sea level rise is expected to be 10-15 per cent higher in countries closer to the equator. This is especially problematic for low lying, coastal countries such as Bangladesh, the Maldives, and Sri Lanka.
For South Asia, the most significant climate risks with a warming of 2 Degree Celsius include- Periods of droughts and intense rains will increase; Frequency of unusually hot and extreme temperatures will increase, increasing death rates and reducing crop yields; Water availability will be unreliable and limit energy production, both for hydropower and cooling of thermal power generation; and Rising sea-levels, estimated to be 60 to 80cm in a 2 Degrees Celsius world, will increase flooding of deltas and coastal cities, which will destroy crops, increase disease and drowning, and destroy infrastructure.
While the lives of everyone in the region will be altered by climate change, the harm caused by progressive global warming will fall hardest on the poor. Low crop yields and associated income loss from agriculture will continue the trend toward migration from rural to urban centres.
In cities, residents will suffer with temperatures magnified by the so-called “heat island effect” of urban environments. Safe drinking water will become increasingly constrained and alternatives, especially during and after flooding, are likely to contribute to greater water-borne diseases such as cholera and diarrhoea.
To reduce the worst effects, major investments in infrastructure, flood defences, drought and heat resistant crops are needed. (KNN/WB)





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