California wildfires cost the US billions of dollars with the global cost of climate-linked disasters topping $100bn. Picture: AP Photo |
Extreme
weather driven by climate change hit every populated continent this
year, the British relief organisation says, warning urgent action is
needed to combat global warming.
“This report shows that for many people, climate change is having devastating impacts on their lives and livelihoods right now,” said Kat Kramer, who heads Christian Aid’s work on climate issues, in a statement on Thursday.
Her team compiled a list of 10 climate-linked disasters and used open
source data, official estimates and assessments from insurance firms to
determine the cost of each.“This report shows that for many people, climate change is having devastating impacts on their lives and livelihoods right now,” said Kat Kramer, who heads Christian Aid’s work on climate issues, in a statement on Thursday.
Topping the list were hurricanes Florence and Michael, which caused an estimated $A24 billion and $A21 billion worth of damage, respectively.
Michael was the strongest storm to hit the continental United States since 1969, and killed 45 people in the US and at least 13 in Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador.
But major polluters including the United States and Saudi Arabia disputed a landmark scientific report released in October that suggested nations must slash fossil fuel use by nearly half in a little over a decade in order to achieve the Paris goals.
The pledges finalised at the COP24 talks in Poland this month set Earth on a path towards 3C warming — enough to displace hundreds of millions and tug at the fabric of society.
“Since much of the public’s day-to-day life is based around using fossil fuels, governments are often unwilling to make the changes that would be needed to cut emissions.”
Christian Aid found that four events — including the California wildfires, drought in southern Europe and widespread flooding in Japan — cost at least $A10 billion each.
Experts say a warming world will lead to sweltering heatwaves, more extreme rainfall, shrinking harvests and worsening water shortages, causing both monetary losses and human misery.
The 20 warmest years on record have been within the past 22 years, the United Nations said last month, with 2018 on track to be the fourth hottest.
Links
- Weather-related catastrophes take toll on insurers
- The ten most costly climate change disasters of 2018
- Climate change: Huge costs of warming impacts in 2018
- How extreme weather in 2018 cost the world billions
- Underestimating Climate Change Risks Could Hit Investors: Opinion
- Major insurers ditch controversial coal mine project
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