The right to survive in a changing climate
Creators
Description
Driven by upward trends in the number of climate-related disasters and human vulnerability to them, by 2015 the average number of people affected each year by climate-related disasters could increase by over 50 per cent to 375 million. This figure is likely to continue to rise as climate change gathers pace - increasing the frequency and/or severity of such events - and poverty and inequality force ever more people to live in high-risk places, such as flood plains, steep hillsides and urban slums, while depriving them of the means to cope with disaster. Climate change is a human tragedy that threatens to completely overload the humanitarian system. The potential human costs are unimaginable, and will be borne overwhelmingly by those least responsible for causing the problem: the world's poor. The responsibility for climate change lies with industrialised countries, which must take urgent action to:
- stop harming - by cutting greenhouse gas emissions by at least 40 per cent by 2020; and
- start helping - by accepting their obligations to pay for adaptation in the developing world - at least $50 billion a year - and bolstering the humanitarian system.
Files
5025.pdf
Files
(319.6 kB)
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Additional details
Others
- Special note
- MFOLL
Legacy Data
- Legacy numeric recid
- 14408