There is strong evidence that extreme weather events – such as hurricanes, floods, droughts and heat waves – are increasing because of climate change. In fact, the Financial Initiative of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) recently calculated that the economic costs of global warming are doubling every decade. The cumulative number of people affected by disasters rose to two billion in the 1990s, up from 740 million in the 1970s. Virtually all of these millions were concentrated in poorer countries.
While it is true that it is difficult to attribute any single weather
event to climate change, it is agreed that climate change brings more
extreme weather events with it. In very broad terms, this is
because climate change is putting more energy (heat) into the world's
weather systems. This energy speeds up the whole system,
increasing the number and intensity of storms.
Watch slideshow on extreme weather.
Heat waves
Although there is an expected reduction in cold related deaths, the
increase in heat related deaths due to climate change is likely to far
outweigh it. The European heat wave of 2003 killed 14,800 people
in France alone and more than 30,000 across the continent. According to
the French National Institute of Health the death rate was 60 percent
higher than normal for that time of year. Models show that
climate change could cause thousands more heat related deaths per year
in many major cities by 2050 – independent of population growth.
In a breakthrough paper on the attribution of climate change impacts,
scientists from the UK published a study which concluded with greater
than 90 percent likelihood that climate change doubled the risk of that
heat wave, which was by far the worst in the historical record.
Heat waves don't only affect people; they can also harm crops, livestock, fish populations and wildlife.
Increased rain and flooding
As the atmosphere warms, it can hold more and more water vapour. This will very likely dry up some areas, dramatically increase
precipitation in others, and cause more volatile weather systems in
general. The increased precipitation will cause more flooding of
homes, flash floods, landslides, erosion, crop damage, and strain on
dams.
Just one example: In summer 2004, two-thirds of
Bangladesh, along with much of Assam and Bihar in India, was under
water, with over 50 million people affected and tens of thousands
suffering from diarrhoea as sewage mingled with the flood waters.
The main monsoon rice crop was also severely damaged – forcing perhaps
20 million people to seek aid. A similar devastating flood occurred
only six years ago, in 1998.
Droughts
Climate change will likely cause dry areas to become drier. In
general, there is likely to be an increase in the risk of drought in
the mid-latitudes interiors of continents. The increase in
droughts will hurt rich and poor nations alike, but regions that are
already experiencing food and water shortages will be the harder hit. A
recent study published by scientists at the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Colorado indicates that the area of the Earth
experiencing ‘very dry’ conditions has more than doubled since the
1970s.
For example, Africa already has a highly variable and
unpredictable climate. Climate change is making that worse. In the
Sahel, there has been on average a 25 percent decrease in annual
rainfall over the past 30 years – consistent with climate change
models.
Hurricanes
Hurricanes need seawater temperatures above 27° Celsius (81°F) in order
to form. Water this warm allows massive evaporation that can then
condense and form the storm's "vortex". As the seawater
temperature goes even higher the likelihood of storms increases
exponentially. Although there are other complex factors involved
in hurricane formation, the link between warmer seawater and hurricanes
is well established. It is also certain that climate change
is raising ocean temperatures. Therefore, climate change is
making the conditions under which hurricanes, cyclones and tropical
storms form more common.