Climate Disruptions Will Swamp Aid Efforts in Seven Years -- Oxfam Report
Climate change will overload humanitarian system, warns Oxfam
Number of people affected by extreme weather has doubled in 30 years and is expected to reach 375 million a year by 2015
The Guardian (U.K.), April 20, 2009
Emergency
organisations could be overwhelmed within seven years by the rising
number of people in poor countries affected by floods, droughts,
heatwaves, wild fires, storms, landslides and other climate hazards.
Analysis
by Oxfam International of the 6,500 climate-related disasters recorded
since 1980 show that the numbers of people affected by extreme weather
events, many of which are linked to climate change, has doubled in just
30 years and is expected to increase a further 54% to more than 375
million people a year on average by 2015. The figure does not include
people hit by other disasters such as wars, earthquakes and volcanoes.
Worldwide
emergency aid spending will have to be nearly doubled to at least $25bn
(£17.2bn) a year to cope, says the report, The Right To Survive.
"Climate
change is set to overload the humanitarian system and destroy the lives
and livelihoods of people today and into the future. The system can
barely cope with the current level of disasters and could be
overwhelmed," said Oxfam's chief executive, Barbara Stocking.
Since
the 1980s, the average number of people affected by climate-related
disasters has risen from 121 million to 243 million a year. Reported
major floods have quadrupled, peaking in 2007/8 when 23 African and 11
Asian countries experienced their worst in memory, heavy rains hit much
of Central America, hurricanes created havoc in the Caribbean and
cyclones devastated large swaths of Burma and Bangladesh.
The
projected increase in climate-related disasters is expected to be
driven by more small and medium-scale events which attract the least
humanitarian assistance.
"While
climate change increases people's exposure to disasters, it is their
vulnerability to them that determines whether they survive, and if they
do, whether their livelihoods are destroyed," says the report.
"In
rich countries, an average of 23 people die in any given disaster,
[but] in least-developed countries, the average is 1,052. Poor people
live in poorly constructed homes, often on land more exposed to hazards
such as floods, droughts, or landslides, and in areas without effective
health services or infrastructure," it says.
In
addition to the rise in extreme climatic events, people's vulnerability
to natural disasters is increasing. "Rapid urbanisation in developing
countries means that slums are expanding on to precarious land. The
global food crisis is estimated to have increased the number of hungry people in the world to just under one billion.
Now the global economic crisis is driving up unemployment and
poverty, while undermining social safety nets".
Oxfam
called for a fundamental review of the humanitarian aid system, saying
that in addition to the $25bn a year for disaster relief, much more
would be needed to adapt to future climate change. "A commitment to
rich countries spending $42bn a year to help them adapt to unavoidable
climate change is a vital first step and in the medium-term, developing
countries will need at least $50bn a year."
The
report adds: "Finance for adaptation is an obligation it must be
separate and additional to aid commitments, in the form of grants not
loans, and disbursed through equitable governance mechanisms."
Oxfam
condemned rich countries' reluctance to provide money for poor
countries. "Adaptation finance is needed immediately so that developing
countries can begin investing in projects to reduce vulnerability. So
far, rich countries have pledged $18bn in one-off amounts and less than
$1bn has been delivered. In the same time, countries have found
trillions to bail out their banking sectors," says the report.
According
to the UN's office of humanitarian affairs, there have been
climate-related disasters in Burundi, Bangladesh, Madagascar, Colombia,
Indonesia, Peru and Bolivia in the past eight weeks.
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