"Climate change is not here yet"
Just in case you didn't get a sense of the way things are moving
Natural
disasters displaced more people than war in 2013, study finds
Norwegian
Refugee Council finds ‘mega disasters’ such as typhoons and
hurricanes drove 22 million people from homes
17
September, 2014
Natural
disasters displaced three times as many people as war last year –
even as 2013 was a horrific year for conflict – with 22 million
people driven out of their homes by floods, hurricanes and other
hazards, a new study has found.
Twice
as many people now lose their homes to disaster as in the 1970s, and
more people move into harm’s way each year, the study by the
Norwegian Refugee Council found.
“Basically,
the combination of mega natural disasters and hundreds of smaller
natural disasters massively displaces people in many more countries
than the countries that have war and conflict,” said Jan Egeland,
the secretary of the Norwegian refugee council.
He
said he hoped the findings would prod leaders meeting at a United
Nations climate summit next week to work to protect populations from
more disaster-prone future under climate change.
Last
year was in some ways an anomaly because so many people were driven
out of their homes by war. In some years, 10 times as many people
lose their homes to natural disasters. “Natural disasters are
underestimated as a scourge that is hitting tens of millions of
people every year,” Egeland said.
On
average, 27 million people a year lost their homes to natural
disasters over the last decade. In 2010, that number rose to 42
million.
While
mega-disasters such as the devastating typhoon Haiyan in the
Philippines attract international attention, the losses due to
smaller-scale storms and flooding often go unrecorded.
A
storm surge from typhoon Haiyan was capable of destroying a home in
seconds.
The
global figure for those displaced by disasters could even be higher,
Egeland said.
Those
living in developing countries are most at risk. The study found more
than 80% of those displaced over the last five years lived in Asia.
That pattern held last year as well when nearly 19 million of the 22
million displaced lived in Asia.
In
many instances, local people do not have time to recover from a
disaster before a new one hits, the study found.
In
the Philippines last year, some 5.8 million people lost their homes
because of a constellation of disasters.
Typhoon
Haiyan alone displaced some 4.1 million, with others forced out by
typhoon Trami and an earthquake.
Africa
also saw widespread displacement by rainy season flooding in Niger,
Chad, Sudan and South Sudan.
America
did not go unspared, with nearly 220,000 people losing their homes to
tornadoes in Oklahoma.
The
risk of such disasters is also rising, outpacing population growth
and even rapid urbanisation. Global population has doubled since the
1970s, but the urban population has tripled since that time.
The
mass migration from countryside to cities is putting more and more
people at risk – especially in Asia’s mega-cities, which are the
most disaster prone.
Africa,
where populations are expected to double by 2050, also faces
increasing risk.
“These
vast urban areas become traps when a natural disaster hits,”
Egeland said. “People are crammed together and there is no escape.
They live in river deltas, they live on hurricane beaches, they live
along river beds that are easily flooded, they live where there are
mud slides, and so on.”
Scientists
predict a rise in such extreme weather events in a future under
climate change.
Better
early warning systems in some countries, such as Bangladesh, have
succeeded in keeping people safe during such storms. But they are
still at risk of losing all they own.
“We
are now better at saving lives, but we are not able to save their
homes and their livelihoods so they become destitute,” he said.
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