Region: Corporate      Government
You are not logged in    Login
IDS Emergencymanagement
  The Information Resource for the Emergency Management Industry!
Browse Emergency Products & Suppliers By Category
Browse Emergency Whitepapers By Sector
Browse Emergency Management Events By Category
Participation Options
Free Listing
Interested In Exhibiting?
Submit Events
About IDS Emergency
Submit News
Emergency Management Newsletter
Press ReleaseClick Here to view Press Releases
Exhibitor Category Logo
Africa Worst Hit by Global Warming, Least Prepared to Tackle Climate Change
November 06, 2006
Click HereView Participation Packages
Click Here
Add paper

Africa is the continent most affected by global warming, but is the least prepared to tackle the causes of climate change, experts said on Sunday ahead of a major international environment conference
 
International action to reduce the effects of global warming should include helping improve Africa's climate change monitoring capacity, Achim Steiner, executive director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), told a news conference in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi.

"The countries on the continent can better tailor their response in areas from agriculture to health care, and international donors can better understand Africa's needs now, and in the future," Steiner said.

Rising sea levels could destroy an estimated 30 percent of Africa's coastal infrastructure, according to a new UN report on the impact of climate change on the continent. Coastal settlements in the Gulf of Guinea, Senegal, Gambia and Egypt could be flooded, according to the report produced by the Secretariat of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

By 2080, global warming could lead to a 5 percent fall in the production of food crops, such as sorghum in Sudan, Ethiopia, Eritrea and Zambia; maize in Ghana; millet in Sudan; and groundnuts in Gambia.

Climate change could also lead to natural disasters in the form of severe droughts and devastating floods that would threaten the lives of Africa�s 812 million inhabitants, the report added.

Ironically, however, Africa produces the least amount of the greenhouse gases blamed for climate change.

Other major concerns include the problem of water shortages, which could affect up to 480 million people. The report claims that between 25 percent and 40 percent of natural habitats in Africa could be lost by 2085.

"Part of the action, part of the adaptation response, and part of this responsibility to Africa, must include significant improvements in Africa's climate and weather monitoring capabilities," Steiner said.

An estimated 25 percent of global climate observation stations in East and Southern Africa are not functioning, while most of the remaining facilities are working in a less than an optimum manner, the UNFCCC report said.

"Africa is the largest of all tropical landmasses and, at 30 million square km, is about a fifth of the world's total land area. Yet the climate observing system in Africa is in a far worse and deteriorating state than that of any other continent," Michel Jarraud, Secretary-General of the World Meteorological Organisation, said in a statement.

"There are also major impacts in highly elevated areas like Mount Kenya and Mount Kilimanjaro whose glaciers, ice caps and run-off are important for water supplies. Overall it is estimated that Africa needs 200 automatic weather stations, a major effort to rescue historical data, and improved training and capacity building on climate and weather reporting," he added.

The UN Climate Change Conference will coincide with the second session of the Conference of the Parties to the Kyoto Protocol, a treaty committing signatories to reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Source

Other News
Red Cross Expanding Relief Efforts to Include Disaster Preparedness
State Prepares for Emergency Scenarios
UN Calls for Urgent Global Action against Climate Change, Natural Disasters
Leading Tandem Service Provider Improves Telecom Infrastructure in Areas Most Threatened By Severe Weather
DHL's Disaster Response Team Prepares for 2007 Hurricane Season
Featured Whitepaper
Communication Options to Mitigate Pandemics

The effects of a pandemic, like other disasters, natural or man-made, can be mitig...

                     Read more

 

Industry IDS, Inc.
Business Continuity Institute Continuity Central Open GIS Consortium, Inc Spatial Technologies Industry Association Ambulance Manufacturers Division
ACP
DELEGATES
12965
Conference Sectors  Case Studies  List of Papers  Exhibition Sectors  Vendor Presentation  List of Exhibitors  Industry News  Sponsors  All Exhibitors  All Papers  Sitemap  Registration Links ]

 :: IDS Plastics :: IDS Water ::IDS Packaging::IDS Publishing/Media ::IDS Healthcare Management ::IDS Environment::IDS Power/Energy::  

Industry IDS, Inc. – Online Tradeshow, Exhibition, & Buyers Guide Solutions