http://environment.independent.co.uk/climate_change/article3201567.ece


Climate change: how poorest suffer most 
By Paul Vallely 
Published: 28 November 2007 
Global warming is not a future apocalypse, but a present reality for many of 
the world's poorest people, according to the most hard-hitting United Nations 
report yet on climate change, published yesterday.

A catalogue of the "climate shocks" that have already hit the world is set out 
in the Human Development Report 2007/08. Fewer than two per cent of these have 
affected rich countries. Europe had its most intense heatwave for 50 years and 
Japan its greatest number of tropical cyclones in a single year. But far more 
intense drought, floods and storms than usual have plagued the developing world.

Monsoons displaced 14 million people in India, seven million in Bangladesh and 
three million in China which has seen the heaviest rainfall - and second 
highest death toll - since records began. Cyclones blasted Indonesia, the 
Philippines and Vietnam. Hurricanes devastated the Caribbean and Central 
America, killing more than 1,600 Mayan people in Guatemala. Droughts have 
afflicted Africa, driving 14 million people from their homes.

In the rich world, insurers report a fivefold increase in climate-related 
insurance claims. In the poor world the cost is counted in terms of hidden 
human suffering, for most disasters are under-reported.

Based on new climate modelling, the UN report has a number of strong messages. 
It is highly critical of US, EU and British policies on global warming - it 
says the measures in Gordon Brown's Climate Change Bill are "not consistent 
with the objective of avoiding dangerous climate change".

However, its top-line message is that the fixation of campaigners like Al Gore 
with a long-term "we're all doomed" vision of global warming has diverted 
attention from more immediate threats.

Already, its new research shows, children born in Ethiopia in years of drought 
are 41 per cent more likely to be stunted from malnutrition than those born in 
a time of rains. That has already created two million more malnourished 
children - and this is not an affliction that is shaken off when the rains 
return. It creates cycles of life-long disadvantage.

The report shows how climate shocks force the poor to adopt emergency coping 
strategies - reduced nutrition, withdrawal of children from school, cuts in 
health spending - which damage the long-term health of entire societies.

After 150 years in which human well-being has steadily improved, the world is 
now facing the prospect that progress on indicators such as poverty, nutrition, 
literacy and infant mortality will be arrested. "It may even be reversed," said 
the report's lead author, Kevin Watkins, who was formerly head of research at 
Oxfam.

The report says George Bush's home-state of Texas (population 23 million) has a 
bigger carbon footprint than the whole of sub-Saharan Africa (population 720 
million).

The report also criticises Britain's policy on climate change. The UK is the 
world leader on rhetoric, it says, yet "if the rest of the developed world 
followed the pathway envisaged in the UK's Climate Change Bill, dangerous 
climate change would be inevitable".

The report says two things need to be done. Rich nations need to massively cut 
emissions (by at least 80 per cent) and developing and emerging nations need to 
make modest cuts (of around 20 per cent). Also, large amounts of money are 
needed to adapt to the consequences of climate change. Hardly anything is being 
spent in the poor world, where people were least responsible for global warming 
but suffer most. The amounts donated to the UN's climate change mitigation fund 
have been equivalent to only one week's worth of spending under the UK's flood 
defence programme.

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