What
a relief to see this after the bulldust that's come out through Radio
NZ in the last couple of days!!
Climate
Change Could Make Humans Extinct, Warns Health Expert
The
Earth is warming so rapidly that unless humans can arrest the trend,
we risk becoming ''extinct'' as a species, a leading Australian
health academic has warned.
By
Deborah Snow, Peter Hannam
Warming
"threat": The rate of change has never been as fast as it
is today. Photo:
Glenn Campbell
SMH,
31
March, 2014
Helen
Berry, associate dean in the faculty of health at the University of
Canberra, said while the Earth has been warmer and colder at
different points in the planet's history, the rate of change has
never been as fast as it is today.
''What
is remarkable, and alarming, is the speed of the change since the
1970s, when we started burning a lot of fossil fuels in a massive
way,'' she said. ''We can't possibly evolve to match this rate [of
warming] and, unless we get control of it, it will mean our
extinction eventually.''
Professor
Berry is one of three leading academics who have contributed to the
health chapter of a Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
report due on Monday. She and co-authors Tony McMichael, of the
Australian National University, and Colin Butler, of the University
of Canberra, have outlined the health risks of rapid global warming
in a companion piece for The Conversation, also published on Monday.
The three warn that the adverse effects on population health and
social stability have been ''missing from the discussion'' on climate
change.
''Human-driven
climate change poses a great threat, unprecedented in type and scale,
to wellbeing, health and perhaps even to human survival,'' they
write.
They
predict that the greatest challenges will come from undernutrition
and impaired child development from reduced food yields;
hospitalisations and deaths due to intense heatwaves, fires and other
weather-related disasters; and the spread of infectious diseases.
They
warn the ''largest impacts'' will be on poorer and vulnerable
populations, winding back recent hard-won gains of social development
programs.
Projecting
to an average global warming of 4 degrees by 2100, they say ''people
won't be able to cope, let alone work productively, in the hottest
parts of the year''.
They
say that action on climate change would produce ''extremely large
health benefits'', which would greatly outweigh the costs of curbing
emission growth.
A
leaked draft of the IPCC report notes that a warming climate would
lead to fewer cold weather-related deaths but the benefits would be
''greatly'' outweighed by the impacts of more frequent heat extremes.
Under a high emissions scenario, some land regions will experience
temperatures four to seven degrees higher than pre-industrial times,
the report said.
While
some adaptive measures are possible, limits to humans' ability to
regulate heat will affect health and potentially cut global
productivity in the warmest months by 40 per cent by 2100.
Body
temperatures rising above 38 degrees impair physical and cognitive
functions, while risks of organ damage, loss of consciousness and
death increase sharply above 40.6 degrees, the draft report said.
Farm
crops and livestock will also struggle with thermal and water stress.
Staple crops such as corn, rice, wheat and soybeans are assumed to
face a temperature limit of 40-45 degrees, with temperature
thresholds for key sowing stages near or below 35 degrees, the report
said.
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