WASHINGTON, Jul 8 (OneWorld.net) - Unless immediate action is taken, climate change could reverse 50 years of progress in the fight against global poverty, warns a humanitarian group calling on G8 leaders to prioritize climate change at their first in a series of meetings today.
Dhungoo village in Ethiopia is home to a nomadic community called the Borans. Here, Boran women fetch water during the low and erratic rainy season. Since the late 1980s, rainfall has steadily decreased leading to prolonged droughts and severe water scarcity in the region. © Argaw Ashine, oxfam international (flickr)Changing temperatures worldwide are destroying harvests, causing widespread hunger, forcing people to flee their homes, driving the spread of disease, drying up crucial water supplies, and spurring a rise in disasters, says Oxfam International in a report released Monday (see Oxfam's full statement below). The report coincides with the annual G8 Summit beginning today in L'Aquila, Italy. Climate change and food security will be major topics of discussion for the international leaders in attendance, who will represent Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the European Union.
In addition to Oxfam, numerous aid groups are calling on the wealthy G8 nations to take the lead on preventing the human suffering climate change threatens to unleash.
ActionAid, an international anti-poverty agency, has urged the Group of Eight to dedicate $23 billion a year to food security in order to reverse the trends that recently pushed the number of hungry people worldwide past 1 billion. "In 2008 [the G8] made commitments to tackle the food crisis but since last year, the number of hungry has risen by 100 million," said Angela Wauye of ActionAid Kenya. "Poor people cannot eat promises. This year the G8 must do more."
Meanwhile, an environmental advocacy group is appealing to summit leaders for a firm commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and fight global warming. "The countries gathering in L'Aquila have the biggest responsibility to show leadership on climate," said Kim Carstensen from the conservation organization WWF. "A firm statement by the G8 will send a powerful signal to the developing world and make it easier for the poorer countries to slash their emissions."
In addition, the End Water Poverty coalition -- over 150 groups united to halt the global water and sanitation crisis -- is advising G8 countries to focus on water and sanitation in developing countries or risk derailing progress on food, health, and education. "Water and sanitation underpin all development efforts," said coalition member Water Aid's Oliver Cumming. "Without access to safe water and sanitation other decisions that the G8 make will be severely threatened."
From: Oxfam International
New Oxfam report warns multiple climate impacts could reverse 50 years of work to end poverty
7/6/09
Shifting seasons are destroying harvests and causing widespread hunger - but this is just one of the multiple climate change impacts taking their toll on the world's poorest people - concluded a new report launched by Oxfam today (6 July 2009).
The report ‘Suffering the Science - Climate Change, People and Poverty', is being published ahead of the G8 Summit in Italy, where climate change and food security are high on the agenda. It combines the latest scientific observations on climate change, and evidence from the communities Oxfam works with in almost 100 countries around the world, to reveal how the burden of climate change is already hitting poor people hard.
The report warns that without immediate action 50 years of development gains in poor countries will be permanently lost. It says that climate-related hunger could be the defining human tragedy of this century.
Suffering the Science outlines evidence of how climate change is affecting every issue linked to poverty and development today including:
HUNGER: New research based on interviews with farmers in fifteen countries across the world reveals how once distinct seasons are shifting and rains are disappearing. Farmers from Bangladesh to Uganda and Nicaragua, no longer able to rely on generations of farming experience, are facing failed harvest after failed harvest.
AGRICULTURE: Rice and maize, two of the world's most important crops on which hundreds of millions depend, particularly in Asia, the Americas and Africa, face significant drops in yields even under mild climate change scenarios. Maize yields are forecast to drop by 15 per cent or more by 2020 in much of sub-Saharan Africa and in most of India. One estimate puts the loss to Africa at $2bn a year.
HEALTH: Diseases such as malaria and dengue fever that were once geographically bound are creeping to new areas where populations lack immunity or the knowledge and healthcare infrastructure to cope with them. It is estimated that climate change has contributed to an average of 150,000 more deaths from disease per year since the 1970s, with over half of those happening in Asia.
LABOR: Rising temperatures will make it impossible for people to work at the same rate on hot summer days without serious health impacts with huge ramifications for labourers paid by the hour and the wider economy. Tropical cities such as Delhi could see a drop in worker productivity of as much as 30 percent.
WATER: Water supplies are becoming so acutely challenged that several major cities including Kathmandu and La Paz which are dependent on the Himalayan and Andes glaciers may soon be unable to function.
DISASTERS: Disasters including mega fires and storms are on the rise and could triple by 2030. A record $165 billion was lost in the 2005 hurricane season alone and the insurance industry says that climate change will make the situation worse, particularly for poor people who have no access to insurance.
DISPLACEMENT: An estimated 26 million people have been displaced as a direct result of climate change and each year a million more are displaced by weather related events. Island communities from Vanuatu, Tuvalu and the Bay of Bengal have already been forced to move because of sea level rise.
"Climate change is the central poverty issue of our times," said Jeremy Hobbs, Oxfam International Executive Director. "Climate change is happening today and the world's poorest people, who already face a daily struggle to survive, are being hit hardest. The evidence is right in front of our eyes. The human cost of climate change is as real as any redundancy or repossession notice."
A survey of top climate scientists, also published by Oxfam today, said poor people living in low-lying coastal areas, island atolls and mega deltas and farmers are most at risk from climate change because of flooding and prolonged drought. The scientists, all contributors to the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), named South Asia and Africa as climate change hotspots.
Many scientists are now sceptical that the world can limit global warming to 2°C because they do not believe that politicians are willing to agree the necessary cuts in carbon emissions, the report says. Two degrees is considered to be "economically acceptable" to rich countries however it would still mean a devastating future for 660 million people.
Professor Diana Liverman, a leading contributor to three IPCC Assessment Reports and a member of the National Academy of Sciences Committee which advises the US government on climate change, said: "If we do not make deep cuts in emissions now the changing climate will bring heat stress, sea level rise and more extreme drought and floods. Scientific observations tell us that the world is already warming and it appears that many of the most vulnerable people are starting to experience the impacts of climate change. Organisations like Oxfam can try and help people adapt to climate change but without a serious effort to reduce warming, and in the absence of international funds for adaptation, the food, water, health and livelihoods of millions of people will be at risk."
Oxfam's report says that it is a bitter irony that in temperate zones the impacts of climate change will be milder - at least initially. However in the tropics, where the bulk of humanity lives, many of them in poverty, climate change is beginning to play out more erratically and harmfully.
Oxfam is calling for G8 leaders to take personal responsibility for delivering a fair and adequate global deal to tackle climate change as only political commitment at the highest level can prevent a human catastrophe. Rich industrialized countries, which created the climate crisis and have the resources to tackle it, must cut their emissions by at least 40 per cent on 1990 levels by 2020 and mobilize $150 billion per year to fund emissions reduction and adaptation in the developing world.
"It is scandalous that our leaders continue to resist doing what's needed, and within their power, to tackle the climate crisis," Hobbs said. "G8 leaders, who represent the world's richest polluting countries, must take personal responsibility for delivering a global climate deal which has the needs of the world's poorest people at the heart."
Download the report: Suffering the Science - Climate Change, People and Poverty
OneWorld.net: Latest News, Groups Working on Climate Change and Food Worldwide