Fiercer storm surges brought on by climate change will claim the most land in Latin America, uproot the most people in the Middle East and wreak the greatest economic destruction in East Asia, new research finds.
Economists with the World Bank's energy and environment research team say worsening weather threatens 52 million people, more than 29,000 square kilometers of agricultural land, and 9 percent of coastal nations' gross domestic product (GDP) across the globe.
If they are not shared with more protected countries, the burdens will be grotesquely uneven. Some countries, like the Bahamas, could see more than more than half the coastal GDP swept away. Others, like Namibia, could lose half their coastal land but suffer a somewhat smaller financial blow.
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| What is it like to live in the bull's eye of the globe's strongest storm surges? This is the destruction caused by Cyclone Sidr along the coast of Bangladesh in 1997. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Navy. |
The coastal economic hit to China, meanwhile, is enormous in actual dollars -- about $31.2 billion. Far smaller is the projected financial ruin to the Philippines' coastal economy, about $4.2 billion. But the losses represent 17 percent of China's coastal economy and more than 52 percent of the Philippines', the authors found.
Susmita Dasgupta, lead environmental economist at the World Bank, explained that the climate change threats hold "a very high stake for a small number of cities and countries."
The working paper comes at a key moment for the climate change debate. Policymakers increasingly are discussing the need to help vulnerable countries cope with global warming impacts that scientists fear can't be averted. Money to help protect countries is considered a central element of a new international global warming agreement.
But activists say they are eager for more information about specific ways that countries and communities will be hit by floods, droughts and rising sea levels. On a practical level, they say, that's the kind of data that can really help governments and nonprofits work to protect populations from the worst impacts of climate change.
David Waskow, climate change policy director for the international aid organization Oxfam, said some of the most useful information comes from local communities themselves, which can directly speak to the changes they experience in storm surge intensity and the impacts on their local economies. But, he said, bringing global and regional data on climate change impacts down to the country and community levels is increasingly critical.
"There's no question that this kind of analysis is absolutely essential to figure out what kind of resources will need to be devoted, and also what strategies and approaches are going to be most effective," he said.
The report examines the impact of increasingly intense storms in 84 countries across five regions, calculating for a 10 percent increase in wave height or extreme sea levels over the course of a century. By overlaying the zones that would suffer temporary inundation with population, economic and agriculture statistics from the regions, the authors were able to tease out the different threats facing various regions and nations.
Dasgupta said she hopes the study will help policymakers better decide how and where to direct funding, and noted some of the practical measures -- like improving drainage systems -- that need attention in poor countries.
"Resources are scarce. You can not cover all the low-lying areas along the coast," she said. "We're talking about setting priorities here." But she noted that the report does not take into account the different measures that many countries already are taking to adapt to climate change. She and others argued that the extent to which countries are working to address climate impacts is as much of a key to future funding decisions as the threats a nation may face.
Among the findings:
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