Rescue
workers escorted a stranded couple to safety from their damaged home
after heavy flooding in Letur, Spain, on Wednesday. In some areas of the
country, a month’s worth of rain fell in less than a day. Credit... Susana Vera/Reuters
By Austyn Gaffney
Two weeks before
world leaders meet to debate the climate crisis, a report released on
Thursday shows the 10 deadliest extreme weather events in the past two
decades were made worse by burning fossil fuels.
More than half a million people around the world were killed in those disasters since 2004.
“Many
people now understand that climate change is already making life more
dangerous,” said Friederike Otto, a senior lecturer at Imperial College
London and co-founder of World Weather Attribution, the group that
published the report . “What did not work yet is turning knowledge into action on a large-enough scale.”
Even
with the abundance of evidence on how a warming world is endangering
human life, the world keeps burning fossil fuels: 2023, the hottest year
on record, also set a record for greenhouse gas emissions .
The
stakes are high for how the world will respond in November, with a
pivotal U.S. election and an annual climate summit of world leaders,
known as COP29, hosted in Azerbaijan. Developing countries, hit hard by
climate disasters, are pressing for rich countries to make good on their
pledges to curb emissions and fund climate adaptation projects.
“The U.S. and
really the world face a very sharp fork in the road,” said Michael
Gerrard, a professor of environmental law at Columbia Law School.
Next
week, the United States, the highest per-capita emitter of greenhouse
gas emissions in the world, will vote on its climate future. A Kamala
Harris presidency could continue the work of the Biden administration
in transitioning to renewable energy, largely through tax credits and
increased American manufacturing on clean energy technologies.
Portraits
of the dead hung on what was left of a home in Myasein Kan, a village
in Myanmar, after Cyclone Nargis in 2008. The storm killed more than
138,000 people. Credit... Getty Images
If returned to office, Donald J. Trump could roll back environmental regulations ,
including those that limit greenhouse gases, and continue development
of fossil fuels. He could also pull out of international agreements to
fight climate change, as he did in his first term as president.
“It
will be extremely difficult for the world to take on the climate crisis
if Trump is president of the United States,” said Lena Moffitt,
executive director for Evergreen Action, a climate nonprofit.
A week after the Election Day, the world’s leaders will meet at COP29. In Azerbaijan, a tiny petrostate
on the borders of Russia and Iran they will seek to agree on how to
lower global emissions fast enough that temperatures remain below 1.5
degrees Celsius, or 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, above preindustrial levels.
But
the planet has already warmed 1.3 degrees Celsius, or 2.3 degrees
Fahrenheit, since rich countries began burning fossil fuels like coal,
oil and gas on an enormous scale. The world may now be on track to reach
3 degrees Celsius of warming by the end of the century, according to
Dr. Otto and other climate scientists.
Last year, summit attendees pledged to transition away from fossil fuels ,
but the pact came with heavy caveats. Dr. Otto said she hoped this
year’s conference would create a stricter timeline for that transition
that could hold countries accountable.
The
group of nations also set up a damages fund to help poorer countries
with historically low emissions adapt to climate change. The fund, which currently has about $700 million pledged , is dwarfed by the hundreds of billions of dollars in climate-related damages developing countries may incur by 2030.
Health workers tending to a person who fainted during a heat wave at the Acropolis of Greece last year. Credit... Milos Bicanski/Getty Images
“It’s
a ridiculously and insultingly low sum of money to help the most
vulnerable countries with dealing with the losses and damages,” Dr. Otto
said. “That needs to be orders of magnitude bigger.”
The
new study showed that death tolls from extreme weather events are often
higher in poor countries. Researchers culled the list of weather
episodes from the International Disaster Database, and included three
tropical cyclones, four heat waves, two floods and a drought. They noted
that the high death toll was “a major underestimate,” with potentially
millions of unreported heat-related deaths not included.
Europe faced well-documented heat waves in 2015, 2022 and 2023 that led to almost 94,000 deaths. Another report released this week
shows that during a 2022 heat wave in Europe that caused 68,000 deaths,
more than half of those deaths could be traced back to human-induced
climate change.
But poor countries
suffered more in extreme weather. In Somalia, a 2011 drought made worse
by rising temperatures that sucked water vapor from plants led to
258,000 deaths; in Myanmar, Cyclone Nargis formed in 2008 over warmer
seas and most likely had higher wind speeds and more intense
precipitation as a result of climate change. It killed more than 138,000
people.
Climate attribution studies are now 20 years old, and more than 500 have been published by researchers . The first was published in 2004 ,
according to World Weather Attribution; it showed that the likelihood
of Europe’s 2003 summer, the hottest the continent had seen since 1500,
was doubled by climate change.
To
make such assessments, scientists pair weather observations with
climate models and work with local experts and meteorological agencies.
Burying a 4-year-old who died in a refugee camp in Dadaab, Kenya, during the famine that struck Kenya and Somalia in 2011. Credit... Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
Attribution
studies can help raise awareness of climate change, but researchers
have a hard time finding funding, said Michael Wehner, a senior
scientist in applied mathematics at the Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory.
“We have the technology
and we have the methodology and the machines, the data and the experts,”
Dr. Wehner said. “But they’ve got to be paid to do this, and they’re
not.”
In its report, World Weather
Attribution highlighted the need for protecting vulnerable people,
improving early warning systems, and strengthening infrastructure like
homes from flooding events, before the world reaches its limit for
resilience.
But
some events are now so extreme, experts warned, that governments could
reach the limits of adaptation, underscoring the need to try to curb
global warming as quickly as possible.
“Climate
change has already made life incredibly hard and really dangerous, and
we’re only at 1.3 degrees of warming,” said Joyce Kimutai, a researcher
at Imperial College London. “We’re likely to see an escalation of
impacts and the continual suffering of vulnerable people.”
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