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CMS COP12 to offer guidelines for boat-based wildlife watching

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Guidelines to ensure marine animals are better protected from boat-based wildlife watching will be presented at a major migratory species summit in Manila later this month.

whale-watching
Boat-based whale watching

Leisure cruising to view whales, dolphins, sharks, rays and turtles, as well as seabird colonies is a fast-growing commercial activity worldwide, with positive impacts on local economies.

Yet, if unregulated, this type of marine wildlife tourism can have both immediate and cumulative negative effects on many species. Prolonged noise and intensive human interaction can affect their habitat use, change their natural behaviour, induce chronic stress, and even cause injuries and death as a result of collisions. In the long term, it can result in animals moving away from the area, reproducing less and their populations declining.

Bradnee Chambers, Executive Secretary of the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS), says the new guidelines will help countries to reduce the impact of this type of tourism on some of the world’s most beautiful and iconic sea creatures.

“Our motto is sustainability. Boat-based wildlife watching need not have negative consequences for marine populations and their habitats. We recognise the economic importance of wildlife tourism for local communities and the added benefit it brings in terms of conservation and awareness raising. But if it is left unmanaged and animal populations move away from popular sites or decline in number, everyone will lose,” Dr Chambers said.

The guidelines were developed following a resolution passed at the eleventh CMS Conference of the Parties (COP11) in Quito, Ecuador in 2014. They will be presented for adoption at this month’s COP12, which takes place in the Philippines from October 23 to 28, 2017.

The proposal includes “best practice” models for boat-based wildlife-watching tours and examples of limitations currently in use, such as maximum speed, minimum distance and maximum number of vessels that can interact with one animal.

It also offers species-specific guidelines for boat operators and examples of stress signs in marine wildlife for sea cows; seals, sealions and Walruses; sharks, rays and skates; seabirds; and marine turtles. Targeted measures can help reduce disturbances to species at sensitive times such as when animals are nesting or breeding.

Whales, dolphins and porpoises are of particular concern in relation to unmanaged boat-based wildlife watching, and will be covered separately by an online Whale Watching Handbook currently being jointly developed by the International Whaling Commission (IWC) and CMS.

International Day for Disaster Reduction: Reducing exposure, reducing displacement

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According to the United Nations (UN), the 2017 International Day for Disaster Reduction campaign, which is being observed on Friday, October 13, seeks to raise global awareness about effective actions, policies and practices taken to reduce exposure to disaster risk at the community level, thereby contributing to saving homes and livelihoods.

UN Disaster Risk
Workers rescuing a baby five days after an earthquake in Mexico. Photo credit: UN/Jean Claude Constant

The global body describes it as a considerable challenge which can be accomplished only through coordination, cooperation and collaboration among many stakeholders.

Last year saw the launch of the “Sendai Seven” campaign by the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR), centered on the seven targets of the Sendai Framework, the first of which is reducing disaster mortality. The campaign seeks to create a wave of awareness about actions taken to reduce mortality around the world.

The Sendai Seven Campaign, adds the UN, is an opportunity for all, including governments, local governments, community groups, civil society organisations, the private sector, international organisations and the UN family, to promote best practices at the international, regional and national level across all sectors, to reduce disaster risk and disaster losses. This year’s target is focused on prevention, protection and reducing the number of people affected by disasters.

At the Third UN World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction, the international community was reminded that disasters hit hardest at the local level with the potential to cause loss of life and great social and economic upheaval. Sudden onset disasters displace millions of people every year. In 2014, 19.3 million people were newly displaced by disasters. Disasters, many of which are exacerbated by climate change, have a negative impact on investment in sustainable development and the desired outcomes.

It is also at the local level that capacities need to be strengthened urgently, experts say. The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction is said to be people-focused and action-oriented in its approach to disaster risk reduction and applies to the risk of small-scale and large-scale disasters caused by man-made or natural hazards as well as related environmental, technological and biological hazards and risks.

The International Day for Disaster Reduction was started in 1989, after a call by the United Nations General Assembly for a day to promote a global culture of risk-awareness and disaster reduction. Held every October 13, the day celebrates how people and communities around the world are reducing their exposure to disasters and raising awareness about the importance of reining in the risks that they face.

By resolution 44/236 (December 22, 1989), the General Assembly designated the second Wednesday of October International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction. The International Day was to be observed annually during the International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction, 1990-1999.

By resolution 64/200 of December 21, 2009 the General Assembly decided to designate October 13 as the date to commemorate the Day and to change the Day’s name to International Day for Disaster Reduction. The objective of the observance is to raise awareness of how people are taking action to reduce their risk to disasters.

Images: Osinbajo visits Shell at Abuja Economic Summit

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At the opening of the 23rd Nigeria Economic Summit in Abuja, FCT on Tuesday, October 10 2017, Shell Companies in Nigeria received an august when Vice President, Prof. ‘Yemi Osinbajo, paid a visit to the oil giants.

Chairman, Nigeria Economic Summit Group, Bukar Kyari, accompanied the Vice President.

Shell-NES
L-R: Managing Director, Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company, Bayo Ojulari; Managing Director, The Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria (SPDC) Ltd and Country Chair, Shell Companies in Nigeria, Osagie Okunbor; receiving Chairman, Nigeria Economic Summit Group, Bukar Kyari, and the Vice President, Prof. ‘Yemi Osinbajo, at the Shell exhibition stand at the opening of the 23rd Nigeria Economic Summit in Abuja… on Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Images: NCF embarks on waste management advocacy campaign

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The Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF has embarked on waste management advocacy campaign activities in 20 communities in Eti-Osa Local Government Area, Lagos State, following its receipt of the Aspire Coronation Trust (ACT) Foundation grant to advocate for actions that promote proper waste separation, management and disposal in selected communities of Lagos, and geared towards making the environment sustainable and habitable for future generations.

The selected communities are Sangotedo, Idado, Gbara, Elegushi, Iru/Victoria Island, Agungi, and Olugborogan, the host community to NCF.

The project is being carried out over a period of six months, commencing from September 2017. It has been divided into five major phases: Community Entry; Community & School Sensitisation; Clean up Exercise; Monitoring & Evaluation; and Post Project Supervision.

Nigerian Conservation Foundation
High Chief Eletu of Elegushi Community (middle) and NCF/ACT Foundation Team during the sensitisation exercise on waste management advocacy campaign in Eti-Osa LGA
Nigerian Conservation Foundation
L-R: Ayodeji Ojo, Programmes Lead of ACT; Ndifreke Okwuegbunam, Head of Programmes of ACT; Bosede Kosemani and Funso Eyanro of NCF, at the grant award receiving ceremony at Ford Foundation, Banana Island, Lagos on July 27, 2017

World Obesity Day: Child, teen obesity soars tenfold – Report

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The number of obese children and adolescents (aged five to 19 years) worldwide has risen tenfold in the past four decades. If current trends continue, more children and adolescents will be obese than moderately or severely underweight by 2022, according to a new study led by Imperial College London and the World Health Organisation (WHO).

obesity
Obesity

The study was published in The Lancet ahead of World Obesity Day (October 11). It analysed weight and height measurements from nearly 130 million people aged over five years (31.5 million people aged five to 19, and 97.4 million aged 20 and older), making it the largest ever number of participants involved in an epidemiological study. More than 1,000 contributors participated in the study, which looked at body mass index (BMI) and how obesity has changed worldwide from 1975 to 2016.

Obesity rates in the world’s children and adolescents increased from less than 1% (equivalent to five million girls and six million boys) in 1975 to nearly 6% in girls (50 million) and nearly 8% in boys (74 million) in 2016. Combined, the number of obese five to 19 year olds rose more than tenfold globally, from 11 million in 1975 to 124 million in 2016. An additional 213 million were overweight in 2016 but fell below the threshold for obesity.

 

Food marketing, policies, pricing behind obesity rise

Lead author Professor Majid Ezzati, of Imperial’s School of Public Health, says: “Over the past four decades, obesity rates in children and adolescents have soared globally, and continue to do so in low- and middle-income countries. More recently, they have plateaued in higher income countries, although obesity levels remain unacceptably high.”

Professor Ezzati adds: “These worrying trends reflect the impact of food marketing and policies across the globe, with healthy nutritious foods too expensive for poor families and communities. The trend predicts a generation of children and adolescents growing up obese and at greater risk of diseases, like diabetes. We need ways to make healthy, nutritious food more available at home and school, especially in poor families and communities, and regulations and taxes to protect children from unhealthy foods.”

 

More obese than underweight 5 to 19 year olds by 2022 but underweight persists in poor regions

The authors say that if post-2000 trends continue, global levels of child and adolescent obesity will surpass those for moderately and severely underweight youth from the same age group by 2022. In 2016, the global number of moderately or severely underweight girls and boys was 75 million and 117 million respectively.

Nevertheless, the large number of moderately or severely underweight children and adolescents in 2016 (75 million girls and 117 million boys) still represents a major public health challenge, especially in the poorest parts of the world. This reflects the threat posed by malnutrition in all its forms, with there being underweight and overweight young people living in the same communities.

Children and adolescents have rapidly transitioned from mostly underweight to mostly overweight in many middle-income countries, including in East Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean. The authors say this could reflect an increase in the consumption of energy-dense foods, especially highly processed carbohydrates, which lead to weight gain and poor lifelong health outcomes.

Dr Fiona Bull, programme coordinator for surveillance and population-based prevention of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) at WHO, says: “These data highlight, remind and reinforce that overweight and obesity is a global health crisis today, and threatens to worsen in coming years unless we start taking drastic action.”

 

Solutions exist to reduce child and adolescent obesity

In conjunction with the release on the new obesity estimates, WHO is publishing a summary of the Ending Childhood Obesity (ECHO) Implementation Plan. The plan gives countries clear guidance on effective actions to curb childhood and adolescent obesity. WHO has also released guidelines calling on frontline healthcare workers to actively identify and manage children who are overweight or obese.

Dr Bull adds: “WHO encourages countries to implement efforts to address the environments that today are increasing our children’s chance of obesity. Countries should aim particularly to reduce consumption of cheap, ultra-processed, calorie dense, nutrient poor foods. They should also reduce the time children spend on screen-based and sedentary leisure activities by promoting greater participation in physical activity through active recreation and sports.”

Court orders permanent forfeiture of N3.3b properties linked to Alison-Madueke

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A Federal High Court, Lagos on Wednesday, October 11, 2017 ordered the permanent forfeiture of 56 houses situated in Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja valued at $21,982,224 (about N3.3 billion) allegedly linked to a former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Allison-Madueke, to the Federal Government.

Diezani Alison-Madueke
Diezani Alison-Madueke. Photo credit: TODAY.ng

The trial judge, Abdul-Azeez Anka, made the order in response to a motion by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) seeking the permanent forfeiture of the property.

The anti-graft agency while urging the court to grant the motion argued that the property sought to be attached are reasonably suspected to be proceeds of unlawful activities.

Having listened to the submissions of EFCC’s counsel, Anselem Ozioko, Justice Anka granted the motion as prayed.

The forfeited properties include 21 mixed housing units of eight numbers of four bedroom penthouse apartment; six three-bedroom apartments; two three-bedroom apartments and one four-bedroom apartment, all ensuite and located at 7, Thurnburn Street and 5, Raymond Street, Yaba, valued at N937 million and bought through Chapel Properties Ltd.

Others are 16 four-bedroom terraces, located at Heritage Court Estate, Omerelu Street, Diobu GRA, Port Harcourt, River States, valued at N928 million and bought through Blue Nile Estate Ltd; 13 three-bedroom with one room maid’s quarter, situated at Mabushi Gardens Estate, Plot 1205, Cadastral Zone B06, Mabushi, Abuja, valued at N650 million and bought through Azinga Meadows Ltd and six flats of three bedrooms and one boys quarter, located at Plot 808 (135) Awolowo Road, Ikoyi, Lagos, valued at N805 million and bought through Vistapoint property Development Ltd.

In granting the motion, the judge noted that there was no response to the applicant’s motion on notice for final forfeiture by any of the respondents despite been served with the hearing notice.

Justice Anka said: “I have gone through the affidavit attached to motion for final forfeiture as well as the submissions of the EFCC’s counsel, A. B. C. Ozioko. The court has no option considering the incontrovertible evidence filed by the EFCC than to grant the application.

“The motion for final forfeiture is accordingly granted as prayed. All parties have right of appeal.”

Joined as respondents in the suit are Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke (1st respondent), Donald Chidi Amamgbo (2nd respondent), Chapel Properties Limited (3rd respondent), Blue Nile Estate Limited (4th respondent), Azinga Meadows Limited (5th respondent) and Vistapoint Property Development Limited (6th respondent).

By Chinyere Obia

Court refuses to hear Evans fundamental rights suit

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Justice Abdulazeez Anka of the Federal High Court, Lagos on Wednesday, October 11, 2017 refused to hear a fundamental rights suit filed by suspected kidnapper, Chukwudumeme Onwuamadike, also known as Evans, seeking N300 million damages for illegal detention.

Evans kidnapper
Evans

Justice Anka said the case file would be returned to the Chief Judge for further directive.

The judge had earlier heard the case during the court’s long vacation and adjourned until August 29 for judgment after parties argued it and adopted their addresses on August 16.

But, the Police, through its counsel, Mr. David Igbodo, said another lawyer, Mr Henry Obiazi, who represented the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) and the Nigeria Police when the case was heard, did so without authorisation.

The police prayed the court to set aside all the purported arguments made by Obiazi and to set aside the ruling it delivered on August 16 in which he adjourned for judgment.

When the case came up before another judge, Justice Chuka Obiozor during the long vacation, he held that the case was no longer urgent.

Justice Obizor then returned the file to the Chief Judge, Justice Adamu Kafarati, for re-assignment to another judge.

The case was subsequently re-assigned to Justice Babs Kuewemi.

However, Evans’ counsel, Olukoya Ogungbeje, wrote the Chief Judge, informing him that Justice Anka had already adjourned the case for judgment.

Based on the letter, the case was again returned to Justice Anka.

When the case came up before Justice Anka on Wednesday, he expressed displeasure that the case was returned to him when the issue of judgment had been overtaken by events.

The judge said that since the police had filed other applications, the earlier adjournment for judgment had become void, adding that even if he had written the judgment earlier, it meant that a new one would be written.

Police counsel Mr. Chukwu Agwu accused Ogungbeje of “smuggling” the case file back to Justice Anka’s court.

He said: “The case was re-assigned to Justice Kuewumi. How my learned colleague smuggled this case to this court is baffling. He did not avail us with a copy of his letter to the Chief Judge, otherwise we would have reacted.”

But Ogungbeje said he wrote the letter on the basis that since judgment had already been fixed, Justice Anka would deliver it after entertaining the late application filed by the police.

Meanwhile, Justice Anka held that it was not factual to say that judgment had been reserved “when it’s not”, adding that the court was obliged to hear the fresh applications by the police.

He said the case was not adjourned for judgment but for hearing, adding that Ogungbeje’s claim that the case was for judgment was not the true position.

Ruling, he said: “The case was made for hearing of the motion of first and second respondents.

“The court shall therefore cause a letter to be written to the Adminstrative Judge to explain the true position of the case, which is for further hearing and not judgment.

“Parties shall therefore await the decision of the Admin Judge, either to re-assign the case or for this court to maintain the case in its causelist.”

Evans has since been arraigned before Justice Hakeem Oshodi of the Lagos State High Court.

While Evans and two others pleaded guilty to the charges, the remaining defendants pleaded not guilty.

The prosecution said that the defendants between February 14 and April 12 along Obokun Street, Ilupeju, Lagos, armed with guns and other dangerous weapons, captured and detained one Mr Duru Donatus.

He said that the defendants allegedly collected a ransom of 223,000 Euros to release Donatus.

In his fundamental rights suit, Evans is claiming N300 million against the police as damages for alleged illegal detention and rights violation.

By Chinyere Obia

Biosafety agency assures Nigerians of proper GMO regulation

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The Director General/CEO, National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), Dr. Rufus Ebegba, has assured Nigerians that the agency will continue to work to ensure the safety of Nigerians with regards to Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs).

NBMA
DG/CEO, NBMA, Dr. Rufus Ebegba (middle); National Coordinator, Northern Youth Anti-Corruption Ambassadors (NYAA), Idris Goga (on Dr. Ebegba’s right); with the members of the NYAA and staff of the NBMA

Dr. Ebegba, who said this while receiving the Mallam Aminu Kano Award of Excellence bestowed on him by the Northern Youth Anti-Corruption Ambassadors of Nigeria in Abuja on Wednesday, October 11, 2017 encouraged Nigerians to support the government in fighting corruption.

“The award conferred on me today shows that Nigerians are watching the actions of the government and the establishment of the Northern Youth Anti-Corruption Ambassador group gives hope to the future of Nigeria,” he said.

Dr. Ebegba dedicated the award to the Federal Government as a symbol to fight corruption and thanked them and assured them that the agency would do better.

While presenting the award of recognition for safety management, youth empowerment, financial discipline and social transformation, the National Coordinator, Northern Youth Anti-Corruption Ambassadors, Idris Goga, commended the DG/CEO for his hard work, high performance, sacrifice, selfless service and outstanding leadership in ensuring that the agency efficiently carries out its mandate.

International Day of the Girl: Over 20,000 girls married illegally every day

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Globally, more than 20,000 girls are married every day below the minimum age permitted by national law, according to new research from Save the Children and the World Bank, marking the International Day of the Girl.

Helle Thorning-Schmidt
Helle Thorning-Schmidt, CEO of Save the Children International

In all, about 7.5 million girls are married illegally every year. In addition, close to 100 million girls are not protected against child marriage under the laws of their countries.

A growing number of countries are raising the legal age of marriage or eliminating exceptions under the law that allow early marriage with parental consent or court consent. However, implementing such laws is challenging.

More than two thirds of all child marriages are still taking place below the minimum age permitted by national law, showing the difficulty in ending the practice.

While some of these marriages are informal as opposed to formal unions, most would likely still be illegal under the law. Weak enforcement and a disconnect between national, customary, and religious laws are part of the issue. Deep-rooted traditions and beliefs mean that traditional leaders in communities still too often support the practice.

Helle Thorning-Schmidt, CEO of Save the Children International, said: “We will not see a world where girls and boys have the same opportunities to succeed in life until we eradicate child marriage. When a girl gets married too young, her role as a wife and a mother takes over. She is more likely to leave school; she may become pregnant and suffer abuse.

“Laws banning the practice are an important first step. But millions of vulnerable girls will continue to be at risk unless child marriage is tackled head on. We need to change attitudes in communities so that we can end this harmful practice once and for all.

“The longer a girl stays in education, the more likely it is that she grows up healthy, secures a livelihood and has healthy and educated children of her own.”

The findings come ahead of an African-led conference on ending child marriage to take place in Senegal later this month. The West and Central Africa High Level Meeting on Ending Child Marriage (October 23-25) will see government leaders, traditional, religious and other influential leaders, child rights organisations, youth, and UN agencies, come together to discuss solutions to end this harmful practice.

“From this meeting, we hope to have an important understanding of child marriage, its consequences, drivers, and solutions. We’ll look at policies and legal frameworks surrounding child marriage, and we intend to build a platform where we will be sharing our successes and challenges in the implementations of policies and programmes in ending child marriage,” said the First Lady of Sierra Leone, Sia Koroma.

West and Central Africa is home to many of the countries with the highest rates of child marriage globally. In this region alone, 1.7 million child marriages are taking place below the national minimum age every year—one of the highest proportions globally. Some countries in the region are also affected by high rates of teenage pregnancy outside of formal marriages, too often a result of gender-based violence or exploitative relationships—which generally go unpunished.

Fatmata, 16, from Sierra Leone, was married last year. “I was 15 years old when I met my husband. Right now, I’m not very happy because I didn’t have the chance to do what I wanted to do in life and now I’m pregnant,” she laments

The analysis by Save the Children and the World Bank is calling for urgent action to tackle child marriage at both the national and international levels. Legal reform to set the minimum age for marriage at a minimum of 18 and eliminating exceptions are needed. But, in addition, national strategies with well-designed targeted interventions are also needed, especially to enable girls to remain in school as a viable alternative to marriage.

At the World Bank the study is part of a work programme that benefits from support from the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation and the Global partnership for Education, Data on the legal age of marriage are from the Women Business and the Law initiative.

A recent study conducted by Save the Children UK reveals that child marriage is both the cause and a result of poor education outcome in Nigeria. (Nigeria Girls’ Education Research, 2017) In Nigeria, over 10.5 million children are out of school, the highest number globally. Nearly 6.3 million of this number are girls. Furthermore, Violence against Children in Nigeria Survey (VACS, 2015) reports that one in every five girls in Nigeria has experienced sexual violence and a third of this number are between age 14 and 15.

In Nigeria, child marriage negatively impacts girls’ education outcomes as they are at increased risk of pregnancy and drop-out. This leads to a recurring cycle of illiteracy, poverty, lack of economic opportunity and entrenched gender gaps.

Therefore, says the organisation, there should be a renewed commitment and immediate action to ensure the right of every girl for education is respected, protected and fulfilled; and national and state level investment on education is increased with an aim to improve the quality and accessibility of an affordable primary and secondary education, including increasing number of female teachers, reinforcing teachers’ code of conduct, improving accessibility of text books and ensuring that the teaching-learning environment is safe and free from all forms of violence against the girl child.

International Day for Disaster Reduction: Climate change a threat to rich, poor

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In commemoration of the 2017 International Day for Disaster Reduction, Achim Steiner (Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme), Patricia Espinosa (Executive Secretary of UN Climate Chang) and Robert Glasser (UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Disaster Risk Reduction and head of the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction) emphasise in this treatise that the climate change phenomenon has become a threat to rich and poor alike, and that management of climate risk should be integrated into disaster risk management as a whole

Hurricane Irma
A view of the aftermath of Hurricane Irma on Sint Maarten Dutch part of Saint Martin island in the Caribbean, Sept. 6, 2017.

From Miami and Puerto Rico to Barbuda and Havana, the devastation of this year’s hurricane season across Latin America and the Caribbean serves as a reminder that the impacts of climate change know no borders.

In recent weeks, Category 5 hurricanes have brought normal life to a standstill for millions in the Caribbean and on the American mainland. HarveyIrma and Maria have been particularly damaging. The 3.4 million inhabitants of Puerto Rico have been scrambling for basic necessities including food and water, the island of Barbuda has been rendered uninhabitable, and dozens of people are missing or dead on the UNESCO world heritage island of Dominica.

The impact is not confined to this region. The record floods across Bangladesh, India and Nepal have made life miserable for some 40 million people.  More than 1,200 people have died and many people have lost their homes, crops have been destroyed, and many workplaces have been inundated. Meanwhile, in Africa, over the last 18 months 20 countries have declared drought emergencies, with major displacement taking place across the Horn region.

For those countries that are least developed the impact of disasters can be severe, stripping away livelihoods and progress on health and education; for developed and middle-income countries the economic losses from infrastructure alone can be massive; for both, these events reiterate the need to act on a changing climate that threatens only more frequent and more severe disasters.

 

A (shocking) sign of things to come?

The effects of a warmer climate on these recent weather events, both their severity and their frequency, has been revelatory for many, even the overwhelming majority that accept the science is settled on human-caused global warming.

While the silent catastrophe of 4.2 million people dying prematurely each year from ambient pollution, mostly related to the use of fossil fuels, gets relatively little media attention, the effect of heat-trapping greenhouse gases on extreme weather events is coming into sharper focus.

It could not be otherwise when the impacts of these weather events are so profound. During the last two years over 40 million people, mainly in countries which contribute least to global warming, were forced either permanently or temporarily from their homes by disasters.

There is clear consensus: rising temperatures are increasing the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere, leading to more intense rainfall and flooding in some places, and drought in others. Some areas experience both, as was the case this year in California, where record floods followed years of intense drought.

TOPEX/Poseidon, the first satellite to precisely measure rising sea levels, was launched two weeks before Hurricane Andrew made landfall in Florida 25 years ago. Those measurements have observed a global increase of 3.4 millimeters per year since then; that’s a total of 85 millimeters over 25 years, or 3.34 inches.

Rising and warming seas are contributing to the intensity of tropical storms worldwide. We will continue to live with the abnormal and often unforeseen consequences of existing levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, for many, many years to come.

In 2009, Swiss Re published a case study focused on Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties, which envisaged a moderate sea level rise scenario for the 2030s which matches what has already taken place today. If a storm on the scale of Andrew had hit this wealthy corner of the US today, the economic damage would range from $100 billion to $300 billion. Now the estimates suggest that the economic losses from Harvey, Irma and Maria could surpass those numbers.

 

Reduce disaster risk now; tackle climate change in the long-term

Miami is working hard on expanding its flood protection programme; $ 400 million is earmarked to finance sea pumps, improved roads and seawalls. Yet, this level of expenditure is beyond the reach of most low and middle-income countries that stand to lose large chunks of their GDP every time they are hit by floods and storms.

While the Paris Agreement has set the world on a long-term path towards a low-carbon future, it is a windy path that reflects pragmatism and realities in each individual country. Thus, while carbon emissions are expected to drop as countries meet their self-declared targets, the impacts of climate change may be felt for some time, leaving the world with little choice but to invest, simultaneously, in efforts to adapt to climate change and reduce disaster risk. The benefits of doing so make economic sense when compared to the cost of rebuilding.

This will require international cooperation on a previously unprecedented scale as we tackle the critical task of making the planet a more resilient place to the lagging effects of greenhouse gas emissions that we will experience for years to come. Restoring the ecological balance between emissions and the natural absorptive capacity of the planet is the long-term goal. It is critical to remember that the long-term reduction of emissions is THE most important risk reduction tactic we have, and we must deliver on that ambition.

The November UN Climate Conference in Bonn presided over by the small island of Fiji, provides an opportunity to not only accelerate emission reductions but to also boost the serious work of ensuring that the management of climate risk is integrated into disaster risk management as a whole. Poverty, rapid urbanisation, poor land use, ecosystems decline and other risk factors will amplify the impacts of climate change. Today on International Day for Disaster Reduction, we call for them to be addressed in a holistic way.

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