Guest guest Posted October 12, 2008 Report Share Posted October 12, 2008 The Article is from Down To Earth (Oct 15-31 Edition). It gives an idea of Flood, Drought and Cyclone Hotspots on our part of the Planet. Dr.V.N.SharmaDeath at your doorstep Enlarge View Afghanistan, India, Indonesia, Pakistan particularly vulnerable to extreme weather conditions Flood-risk hotspots occur in Africa, including the Sahel, the Horn of Africa, Great Lakes region, Central Africa and Southeast Africa; Central, South and Southeast Asia; and Central America and the western part of South America Drought-risk hotspots are located in sub-Saharan Africa; South Asia, particularly Afghanistan, Pakistan and parts of India; and South East Asia, particularly Myanmar, Vietnam and Indonesia Cyclone-risk hotspots include Mozambique and Madagascar, Central America, Bangladesh, several parts of India, Vietnam and other Southeast Asian countries. As the frequency and intensity of cyclones increases, so will the number of communities at high risk. This will include communities further inland that are not used to coping with such disasters Areas at risk from more than one climate related disaster include much of sub- Saharan Africa, especially the east coast, and much of South Asia Some areas are at the risk of all three disasters. These include Southeast Africa and parts of South and Southeast AsiaHuman induced climate change magnifies the risk of disasters—avalanches, extremes of temperature, droughts, floods, landslides, wild fires and wind storms—everywhere but especially in those parts of the world where there are already high levels of human vulnerability Losses galore Between 2005 and 2006, natural disasters killed 120,000 people, affected 271 million more and caused economic losses totalling US $250 billion In the decade 1984-1993, 1.6 billion people were affected by natural disasters compared with 2.6 billion in the following decade (1994-2003) Disaster cost between 1990 and 1999 was more than 15 times higher ( US $652 billion in material losses) than it was between 1950 and 1959 ( US $38 billion at 1998 values). 68 per cent of deaths and 89 per cent of all economic losses between 2000 and 2007 resulted from weather-related disasters (Climate change threatens to dramatically increase both the number of people affected and the scale of economic damage) In the near future During the next 20-30 year period, we are likely to see: The number of people impacted by water scarcity may increase from 1.7 billion in 2000 to around 5 billion by 2025. Climate change will account for roughly 20 per cent of this growth Intensification of the water cycle, tropical cyclones (due to higher sea surface temperatures) and a polarization of rainfall pattern Longer dry periods in many parts of the world Increase in the number, intensity and duration of droughts Source: Humanitarian Implications of Climate Change Report—Mapping emerging trends and risk hotspots (commissioned by CARE International and the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs) -- Dr.V.N.Sharmahttp://canvas.nowpos.com/vnsharma Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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