‘Climate – powered hunger’ rises 123% in 10 worst-hit nations
Human-caused climate change likely contributed to the deadly floods that submerged parts of Pakistan, according to a rapid analysis looking at how much global heating was to blame. An international team of climate scientists at the World Weather Attribution group said that rainfall in the worst-hit regions had increased as much as 75 percent in recent decades and concluded that manmade activity likely boosted record levels of August precipitation in Sindh and Balochistan provinces. The resulting flooding affected over 33.5 million people, destroyed 1.7 million homes and killed nearly 1,500 people including 555 Childred and nearly 12,860 have been injured since June 14. The unprecedented monsoon rains and floods have swept away roads and infrastructure and wiped out crops and livelihoods. To determine what role global heating played in the downpours, the scientists analysed weather data and computer simulations of today’s climate to determine the likelihood of such an event occurring at the roughly 1.2 degrees Celsius of warming that human activity has caused since the Industrial era. They found that climate change likely increased the 5-day total rainfall for Sindh and Balochistan by up to 50 percent. The analysis, “Hunger in a heating world,” found that acute hunger had risen 123 percent over six years in the ten most-affected nations, defined by the most number of UN weather appeals. “The effects of severe weather events ae already being felt,” Lia Lindsey, Oxfam America’s senior humanitarian policy advisory told the AFP news agency, adding the report was timed to pressure world leaders at the UN General Assembly to act. The countries Somalia, Haiti, Djibouti, Kenya, Niger, Afghanistan, Guatemala, Madagascar, Burkina Faso and Zimbabwe have repeatedly been battered by extreme weather over the last two decades. An estimated 48 million people across those countries suffer acute hunger, defined as hunger resulting from a shock and causing risks to lives and livelihoods and based on reports compiled by the World Food Programme. That figure is up from 21 million people in 2016; 18 million people are on the brink of starvation.
Climate-fuelled hunger doubles
The report acknowledges the complexity surrounding the causes of global hunger, with conflict and economic disruption including those from the Covid-19 pandemic remaining key drivers. “However, these new and worsening weather extremes are increasingly peeling away the abilities of poor people particularly in low-income countries to stave off hunger and cope with the next shock,” it said. Somalia, for example, is facing its worst drought on record, forcing one million people to flee their homes. The climate crisis is also causing more frequent and intense heat waves and other extreme weather including floods, which covered one-third of Pakistan, washing away crops and topsoil and destroying farming infrastructure.
Climate-fuelled hunger doubles
From record droughts to catastrophic floods, the world’s worst climate hotspots are seeing a surge in acute hunger, according to an Oxfam report that called on rich nations to drastically cut their emissions and compensate low-income countries. The analysis, “Hunger in a heating world,” found that acute hunger had risen 123 percent over six years in the ten most-affected nations, defined by most number of UN weather appeals. “The effects of severe weather events are already being felt,” Lia Lindsey, Oxfam America’s senior humanitarian policy advisory told AFP, adding the report was timed to pressure world leaders at the UN General Assembly to act.
‘Obligation, not charity’
Oxfam stressed that climate-fuelled hunger is a “stark demonstration of global inequality,” with the countries least responsible for the crisis suffering most from its impact. Polluting industrialised nations such as those of the G20 are responsible for more than three-quarters of the world’s carbon emissions, while the 10 climate hotspots are collectively responsible for just 0.13 percent. “Leaders especially of rich polluting countries must live up to their promises to cut emissions,” said Gabriela Bucher, Oxfam International executive director, in a statement. “They must pay for adaptation measures and loss-and-damage in low-income countries, as well as immediately inject lifesaving funds to meet the UN appeal to respond to the most impacted countries.” The UN humanitarian appeal for 2022 comes to $49 billion, which Oxfam noted was equivalent to less than 18 days of profit for fossil fuel companies when looking at average daily profits over the last 50 years. Canceling debt can also help governments free up resources, said Bucher, with rich countries holding a moral responsibility to compensate poorer, most-affected countries. “This is an ethical obligation, not charity,” she said.