150M People, $35T at risk by 2070 due to Global Warming Costal Flooding
While some are still attacking Al Gore as a fear-monger for An Inconvenient Truth's supposed fantastic claims of dire global warming predictions—which naysayers unscientifically insist could happen "only after, and over, millennia"—the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has released a new report with startling conclusions that go beyond Mr. Gore's own position on coastal flooding caused by global warming, specifically, that within this generation's time, 150 million people and over $35 trillion of assets will be at risk due to coastal flooding caused by global warming. The report lists the top ten cities which face the most risk to population and property:
- Calcutta, India,
- Mumbai (Bombay), India
- Dhaka, Bangladesh
- Guangzhou, China
- Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
- Shanghai, China
- Bangkok, Thailand
- Rangoon, Myanmar
- Miami, Florida, USA
- Hai Phong, Vietnam
Miami, Florida, is currently the most exposed U.S. city and will remain so through 2070, its exposed assets growing from $400 billion to over $3.5 trillion in that time. Mumbai has the highest number of people currently exposed to coastal flooding. But by 2070, Calcutta, India, will be the most vulnerable, with the exposed population expected to increase over seven times to more than 14 million people.
The report notes that studies have shown that effective coastal defense plans can take upwards of 30 years to put into place urging that, "Adaptation move to the top of the policy agenda today if it is to make a difference tomorrow."
"Climate change is already happening, and concerted action is needed now to prevent its worst impacts," said OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria. "A range of economic policy options is available and political commitment is needed to implement them."
The full OECD report can be downloaded here (English).
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.alwaysalmost.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-t.cgi/102



