Flood, Fire and Plague: Climate Change Blamed for Disasters
Venice declared a state of emergency on Wednesday after “apocalyptic” floods swept through the lagoon city, flooding its historic basilica and inundating squares and centuries-old buildings.
“This is the result of climate change,” city mayor Luigi Brugnaro said on Twitter.
City thoroughfares were turned into raging torrents, stone balustrades were shattered, boats tossed ashore and gondolas smashed against their moorings as the lagoon tide peaked at 187 cm (6ft 2ins).
It was the highest since the record 194 cm set in 1966, but rising water levels are becoming a regular threat to the tourist jewel.
“Venice is on its knees,” said Brugnaro. “The damage will run into hundreds of millions of euros.”
On the other side of the world, parts of Australia have been ravaged by wild bushfires this week, with four people killed and communities forced to flee the flames.
Since 2016, parts of northern and inland New South Wales, along with southern Queensland, have been in drought that the Bureau of Meteorology says is being driven, in part, by warmer sea-surface temperatures affecting rainfall patterns.
Air temperatures have also warmed over the past century, increasing the ferocity of droughts and fires.
But links between climate change and extreme weather events have become a political football in Australia.
The coal industry-supporting government accepts the need to cut emissions while arguing that stronger environmental action would cripple its economy.
That pits the country against its Pacific island neighbors which are particularly susceptible to warmer temperatures and rising seas.
Globally, concern about effective action has surged since U.S. President Donald Trump abandoned the international Paris Accord on climate change and took steps to dismantle environmental protections.
Trump and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro are among the world’s only leaders who publicly question the science of climate change, despite devastating fires in their countries — in California and the Amazon basin — that environmentalists at least partly blame on global warming.
The leaders’ stance has cast a shadow over global efforts to bend the rising curve of greenhouse gas emissions as governments prepare to meet in Madrid next month for a fresh round of U.N. negotiations over the the implementation of the Paris accord.
While politicians argue, concern is growing about the impact on the health of a warmer world.
The risks extend beyond the threat of disease spreading among survivors in the aftermath of storms such as Cyclone Idai that ravaged Mozambique in March, or Hurricane Dorian that tore through the Bahamas in September.
Scientists say climate change has made such storms more intense, fueling even worse conditions when they make landfall than in the past. But they also are discovering other ways in which rising temperatures contribute to making people ill.
In China, health officials have reported a rare outbreak of pneumonic plague after two cases were confirmed this week in Beijing.
The two were infected in the province of Inner Mongolia, where rodent populations have expanded dramatically after persistent droughts, worsened by climate change, state media said.
An area the size of the Netherlands was hit by a “rat plague” last summer.
The wider implications for health are sobering.
The Lancet medical journal published a study this week saying climate change was already harming people’s health by increasing the number of extreme weather events and exacerbating air pollution.
A warmer world brings risks of food shortages, infectious diseases, floods and extreme heat.
If nothing is done, the impacts could burden an entire generation with disease and illness throughout their lives, researchers said.
“Children are particularly vulnerable to the health risks of a changing climate. Their bodies and immune systems are still developing, leaving them more susceptible to disease and environmental pollutants,” said Nick Watts, one of those who led the Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change study.
Health damage in early childhood is “persistent and pervasive,” he warned, bringing lifelong consequences.
About the photo: A tourist pushes her floating luggage in a flooded St. Mark’s Square, in Venice, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019. The high-water mark hit 187 centimeters (74 inches) late Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019, meaning more than 85% of the city was flooded. The highest level ever recorded was 194 centimeters (76 inches) during infamous flooding in 1966. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
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