From Dengue To Food Security, Climate Change Affects Everything

Highlights of the Statement on the State of the Global Climate in 2019 report, released by the World Meteorological Organization on 10 March 2020

offline
Highlights of the Statement on the State of the Global Climate in 2019 report, released by the World Meteorological Organization on 10 March 2020

Concerned with the deepening climate crisis, the World Meteorological Organization, on 10 March 2020, released its Statement on the State of the Global Climate in 2019, a multi-agency report aimed at helping policymakers round the world fulfil goal 13 of the United Nation Development Programme: Climate action.

Here, we take a look at some of its key findings.

Health

Australia, India, Japan, and Europe all witnessed record-setting high temperatures in 2019, which adversely affected health and well-being. In Japan, a major heatwave event resulted in over 100 deaths and an additional 18,000 hospitalizations. In France, over 20,000 emergency-room admissions were recorded for heat-related illnesses between June and mid-September. Furthermore, during two summer heatwaves, there were a total of 1,462 excess deaths in the affected regions.

More worryingly, ever-changing climatic conditions have made it easier for the Aedes mosquito species to transmit the dengue virus. The global incidence of dengue has increased exponentially in recent decades, and about half the world’s population is now at risk of infection.

Food Security

Climate variability and extreme weather events are among the key causes of the recent rise in global hunger. After a decade of steady decline, hunger is on the rise again—over 820 million people suffered from hunger in 2018. Thirty-three countries were affected by food crises in 2018. Almost all of these countries fell prey to climate variability and weather extremes, in addition to economic shocks and conflicts.

The magnitude of the challenge before the global community—to meet the Zero Hunger target of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development—is enormous. The food security situation deteriorated sharply in 2019 in some countries of the Greater Horn of Africa. By late 2019, about 22.2 million people, (6.7 million in Ethio...

Read more!