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CLIMATE SCIENCE
EU lagging on climate targets: study
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Nov 8, 2016


Africa hit worst by extreme weather in 2015
Marrakesh, Morocco (AFP) Nov 8, 2016 - Four of the 10 countries hammered hardest in 2015 by climate-boosted extreme weather are in Africa, according to a report released Tuesday at UN climate talks in Marrakesh.

"Africa is especially vulnerable to the impacts of climate change," said Sonke Kreft, lead author of the Global Climate Risk Index 2017 report, issued annually by risk analysts Germanwatch.

Poor countries in general are more exposed to the ravages of superstorms, drought, heatwaves and flooding, all of which have become more intense and frequent due to human-induced global warming.

"The distribution of climatic events is not fair," Kreft said, noting that the world's least developed countries have emitted only a small fraction of the greenhouse gases heating up the planet.

Mozambique tops the list of nations most affected on the 2015 climate risk index, followed by Dominica, Malawi and India. Myanmar, Ghana and Madagascar are also among the top 10.

The index measures level of exposure and vulnerability to extreme events.

Climate models predicting that global warming enhances both the intensity and frequence of such events have been borne out by a crescendo of deadly weather, especially over the last decade.

More than half-a-million people worldwide died as a direct result of almost 11,000 extreme weather events from 1996 to 2015, according to the report, which has been tracking risk, country-by-country, for more than a decade.

Storms, heatwaves, floods and other climate-related natural disasters caused upwards of three trillion dollars (2.7 trillion euros) damage over the same period.

During those two decades, the countries worst hit were Honduras, Myanmar and Haiti.

The Philippines, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Vietnam and Thailand were also among the worst affected, taking into account both lives lost and the cost of damage.

The report does not factor out what percentage of the damage done can be attributed directly to global warming.

The UN talks, tasked with implementing the landmark Paris Agreement inked last December, run through November 18.

Despite progress, the European Union is still behind the curve in its programme to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, particularly in industry and transport, a study said Tuesday.

In an assessment coinciding with the UN climate talks in Morocco, the Paris-based Institute for Sustainable Development and International Relations (IDDRI) gave the EU high marks in some areas.

Carbon emissions from electricity production fell by 20.9 percent between 2000 and 2014, and household energy consumption fell by 21.2 percent, relative to living area, from 2000 to 2013.

"Despite this progress, the EU is currently 'off-track' to achieve its objectives by 2030 and 2050," IDDRI warned.

The EU as a bloc has pledged to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by at least 40 percent by 2030, compared with 1990 levels. This is a stepping stone to a planned reduction of 80-95 percent by 2050, again compared with the 1990 benchmark.

The IDDRI report said headway in curbing EU emissions could be attributed to "cyclical effects" -- the impact of the 2008 financial crisis and the slow recovery from it -- rather than a long-term carbon strategy.

"Europe has made significant progress, but new sectoral policies are needed to ensure it can reach its long-term targets, especially in transport and industry," IDDRI Director Teresa Ribera said.

In addition to setting ambitious emissions target for road transport for 2025, the EU should aim at ensuring that fleet procurement -- one of the biggest sectors of the car market -- be 100-percent electric by that date.

The report called for a tougher goals in energy savings for 2030 and for measures to ensure that the EU's carbon market -- the emissions trading system -- does not suffer a repeat of the price collapse of recent years.

It pointed the finger in particular at coal, which plays a large part in energy production in Europe.

"By 2030, unabated (use of) coal needs to drop by more than 50 percent to make way for low-carbon electricity sources," it said.

The study was coordinated with seven other European research institutes, which trawled over national data, analysing the major sectors for carbon emissions.


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