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Africa Will Starve and Asia Will Drown in 30 Years Due to Climate Change: Report
Wednesday, July 3, 2013 5:51 AM
NIKI2
Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...
Quote:The World Bank paints an incredibly bleak picture of the effects of global warming on the most vulnerable regions of the planet. Major Asian cities underwater. Millions trapped in poverty. Africa plunged into drought and plagued by food shortages. Flooding of Biblical proportions. No, that's not the plot to some summer blockbuster set to hit theaters this weekend. That's what a new report from the World Bank says will be our reality within our lifetimes thanks to global warming and climate change. The alarming report shows what only a two-degree celsius rise in global temperatures will do to our planet within the next 20 to 30 years. Among the scariest conclusions: •Events like the mammoth Pakistan floods of 2010—which affected 20 million people—will become commonplace, and the monsoon season could bring a major crisis. •Manilla, Mumbai, Kolkata, Ho Chi Minh City and Bangkok could find themselves underwater or threatened by intense cyclones and water shortages. •By the 2030s, droughts and heat will render 40 percent of current maize-growing land unusable. By the 2050s, depending on where you are on the continent, the proportion of the population that is undernourished will increase by 25 to 90 percent. •People everywhere will be forced into urban areas, exposing even greater numbers of people in informal settlements to disease, pandemics, heatwaves and floods. "This new report outlines an alarming scenario for the days and years ahead—what we could face in our lifetime," said World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim. "The scientists tell us that if the world warms by 2°—warming which may be reached in 20 to 30 years—that will cause widespread food shortages, unprecedented heat-waves, and more intense cyclones. In the near-term, climate change, which is already unfolding, could batter the slums even more and greatly harm the lives and the hopes of individuals and families who have had little hand in raising the Earth's temperature." The World Bank alarm bells are just the latest to sound about the havoc climate change and man-made global warming will cause to the planet. Last week, TakePart laid out exactly what the world has learned in the seven years. http://www.takepart.com/article/2013/06/19/world-bank-climate-report?cmpid=tp-ad-outbrain-general]
Quote: (2005) was, at the time, the hottest year on record. But the March 2012 heatwave that blanketed states east of the Mississippi River shattered all previous records, setting more than 7,000 new all-time highs that month. Throughout the remainder of 2012, weather stations around the country reported more than 34,000 daily high records, making it the hottest year ever in the U.S. .... the summer of 2010 in western Russia, in which 55,000 people lost their lives to the heat, was the warmest in 600 years. .... the six years following 2007 also saw the highest number of extreme rainfall events in U.S. history, according to records dating back to 1905. It was about 32 percent higher than the long-term average over the past century. Over the past seven years, “the particular historic trend towards more extreme rainfall events has indeed continued,” says Kenneth Kunkel, an extreme rainfall expert and research professor at North Carolina State University and the NOAA Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites. Kunkel predicts that the trend will continue. “I think there is an expectation based on some pretty fundamental physics that we still think it’s likely that, over the long term, we’ll continue to see these increases,” Kunkel says. Around 80 percent of the U.S. population, or 243 million people, live in counties that have experienced some weather-related disaster since 2007. More at http://www.takepart.com/article/2013/06/10/climate-change-what-we-know-now]
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