Posts Tagged ‘Germanwatch’

Jamaica among islands at highest climate risk, says report

Jamaica tops the list of five Carib­bean coun­tries, all of them par­ties to the United Nati­ons Frame­work Con­ven­tion on Cli­mate Change, that are at hig­hest risk of extreme wea­t­her events, such as hur­ri­ca­nes and heat­wa­ves, based on 2008 data.

This is accor­ding to the Glo­bal Cli­mate Risk Index 2010, released Tues­day by Ger­man­watch, a non-governmental orga­ni­sa­tion that looks at the poli­tics and eco­no­mics of the deve­l­o­ped world, and the imp­li­ca­ti­ons for deve­lo­ping countries.

Jamaica is fol­lo­wed clo­sely by Haiti which is ran­ked 15th, the Domi­ni­can Repu­blic which is ran­ked 53rd, Anti­gua and Bar­buda that is ran­ked 60th and The Baha­mas which is ran­ked at 118 of 120 countries.

Coun­tries were ran­ked on the basis of a num­ber of fac­tors, nota­bly the death toll asso­cia­ted with disas­ters, the num­ber of deaths per 100,000 inha­bi­tants, the risk of deaths per 100,000 inha­bi­tants, los­ses to purchasing power parity (the loss in the dif­fe­rence bet­ween the Jamai­can dol­lar and the US dol­lar), and gross domestic pro­duct (GDP) losses.

Jamaica expe­ri­en­ced a death toll of 13, accoun­ting for 0.48 deaths per 100,000 in the popu­la­tion, com­pa­red to Haiti where 316 people lost their lives, accoun­ting for 0.44 deaths per 100,000 people in the popu­la­tion. In the Domi­ni­can Repu­blic, 15 people lost their lives in disas­ters last year, accoun­ting for some 0.17 people per 100,000 in the popu­la­tion. Anti­gua and Bar­buda saw no deaths as a result of extreme wea­t­her and neit­her did The Bahamas.

Jamaica, in the inte­rim, lost more than US$190-million in purchasing power parity and expe­ri­en­ced a 0.79 per cent blow to its GDP. Haiti expe­ri­en­ced a US$54-million loss to its purchasing power parity and a 0.04 per cent loss to its GDP. The Domi­ni­can Repu­blic expe­ri­en­ced a US$65-million loss in its purchasing power parity while its GDP was unaffected.

Anti­gua and Bar­buda saw a US$45.85-million loss to its purchasing power parity and a decline in gross domestic pro­duct by 2.94 per cent. The Baha­mas, on the other hand, expe­ri­en­ced little or no decline in its purchasing power parity and saw no loss in its GDP due to disasters.

While not­ing that the fin­dings of the study are based on “past data” and the­re­fore “not a linear pro­jec­tion of future cli­mate impacts”, Ger­man­watch said the report nonethe­l­ess empha­sised the need for care­ful atten­tion to adapta­tion to cli­mate change.

The Cli­mate Risk Index indi­ca­tes a level of expo­sure and vul­nera­bi­lity to extreme events, which coun­tries should see as a warning signal to pre­pare for more severe events in the future, the report noted.

Through an ambi­tious adapta­tion action frame­work, the Copen­ha­gen cli­mate sum­mit can result in a real dif­fe­rence for par­ti­cu­larly vul­nera­ble deve­lo­ping coun­tries. A key role the­re­fore needs to be played by scaled-up finan­cial sup­port pro­vi­ded by deve­l­o­ped coun­tries,” the docu­ment added.

The call comes as govern­ments from the deve­lo­ping world, which sci­en­tists say stand to be worse affec­ted by a chan­ging cli­mate, bar­ter with deve­l­o­ped coun­tries to improve their capa­city to deal with extreme wea­t­her events through the trans­fer of tech­no­logy and increa­sed fun­ding. Deve­lo­ping coun­tries are asking, too, for deve­l­o­ped coun­tries to reduce their green­house gas emis­si­ons which is fuel­ling the war­ming of the earth and resul­ting in cli­mate change. The chan­ging cli­mate, in turn, is threa­te­n­ing to wipe out ent­ire coun­tries such as Tuvalu, in addi­tion to people’s livelihoods.

Jamaica tops the list of five Carib­bean coun­tries that are at hig­hest risk of extreme wea­t­her events.

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