The chief of the United Nations announced a project Wednesday to put every person on Earth in range of early weather-warning systems within five years as natural disasters have grown more powerful and frequent due to climate change.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the project with the Geneva-based World Meteorological Organisation aims to make the alert systems already used by many rich countries available to the developing world.
Today, one-third of the world's people, mainly in least-developed countries and small island developing states, are still not covered by early warning systems, Guterres said. In Africa, it is even worse: 60% of people lack coverage.
This is unacceptable, particularly with climate impacts sure to get even worse, he said. We must boost the power of prediction for everyone and build their capacity to act.
Early warning systems allow for the monitoring of real-time atmospheric conditions at sea and on land as a way of predicting upcoming weather events whether in cities, rural areas, mountain or coastal regions, and arid or polar locations.
Expanding their use has taken on urgency because more lead time allows people to prepare for potentially deadly disasters such as heat waves, forest fires, flooding and tropical storms that can result from climate change.
A World Meteorological Organization report on disaster statistics released last year showed that over the last half-century or so, a climate or water-related disaster has occurred daily on average, resulting in an average of 115 deaths and $202 million in losses a day.
The UN, its partners and many governments are striving to reach an increasingly evasive target of limiting the global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Guterres has instructed WMO, the UN weather agency, to push forward an action plan on the early warning system by the next UN climate conference, which is scheduled to take place in Egypt in November.
WMO plans to build on some of its existing programs like a multi-hazard alert system for hazards such as tropical cyclones, flooding and coastal inundation, as well as an early warning system that helps inform people most at risk of some kinds of disasters, the UN said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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