Shanghai Daily

400m at risk globally as cities fail to address climate change

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HUNDREDS of cities have no climate adaptation plans in place despite rising threats like floods, heatwaves and pollution, according to a report yesterday that said this could put 400 million people at risk across the world.

Fast-expanding urban areas are home to more than half the population of the planet and are increasing­ly exposed to climate-fueled disasters, economic shocks and health crises as the world warms, with fears that vulnerable communitie­s will be hardest hit.

Carbon Disclosure Project, a global non-profit organizati­on that collects data disclosed by companies, cities, states and regions on environmen­tal impact, analyzed over 800 global cities and found that 43 percent do not yet have a plan to adapt to the challenges of climate change.

With more and more people drawn to live in urban areas, CDP estimated that by 2030 around 400 million people will be living in poorly prepared cities.

“The urgent need to act and have adaptation measures in place to keep the citizens safe, is increasing together with (the growing urban population),” said Mirjam Wolfrum, CDP’s Policy Director for Europe.

She said that 93 percent of the cities included in the report were facing

“significan­t threats,” while 60 percent highlighte­d “substantiv­e” water security issues.

The top five hazards are flash and surface flooding — including from rising sea levels — heat waves, rainstorms, extreme hot days and droughts, she said, adding that air pollution is also a major health concern.

On-going adaptation strategies in the cities that reported to CDP include tree planting (20 percent), flood mapping (18 percent) and developing crisis management plans like evacuation systems (14 percent).

With cities responsibl­e for some 70 percent of global emissions, the report said urban centers are also looking at schemes like increasing the use of renewable energy and improving green spaces, transport infrastruc­ture and recycling.

Under the 2015 Paris climate deal, countries agreed to limit global heating to 2 degrees Celsius, with a less damaging target of 1.5 degrees Celsius.

The years since have been among the hottest on record, while severe disasters have affected communitie­s across the planet. But in some cases cities are also moving faster and setting more ambitious climate targets than national government­s, according to CDP.

The report highlighte­d Santa Fe County in the United States, Greater Manchester in the United Kingdom and Penampang in Malaysia — the first city in Southeast Asia to report a net zero ambition.

There has also been a marked increase in cities taking part in the CDP’s annual report, with 812 cities disclosing in 2020, compared to just 48 in the first study in 2011.

Wolfrum said this could be down to the fact that the changes to the climate are increasing­ly visible.

“People in the city council, they can now feel this and see this,” she said.

“They are already paying billions in climate hazards, and they see this as increasing.”

But even those with climate plans are struggling to finance them, CDP found, with a quarter of all cities citing budget shortfalls as a barrier to action.

Globally, cities said they needed at least US$72 billion for planned environmen­tal projects, with around three-quarters looking to the private sector for funding and innovation to help plug the gaps.

Global average annual losses from weather-related and other disasters in cities were estimated at about US$314 billion in 2015 and are expected to increase to US$415 billion by 2030.

 ??  ?? A man hugs a tree as he walks through a group of dead trees planted in Madison Square Park as part of designer and architect Maya Lin’s “Ghost Forest” art installati­on in New York on Tuesday. The work made of dead trees represents the effects of extreme weather events related to climate change, sea-level rise and salt water infiltrati­on. — CFP
A man hugs a tree as he walks through a group of dead trees planted in Madison Square Park as part of designer and architect Maya Lin’s “Ghost Forest” art installati­on in New York on Tuesday. The work made of dead trees represents the effects of extreme weather events related to climate change, sea-level rise and salt water infiltrati­on. — CFP

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