Climate change has set our planet on fire, millions are already feeling the impacts |
By Oxfam |
NAIROBI, Kenya, October 8, 2018/ -- Today, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report detailing progress and pathways to liming global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Related Kenyan entrepreneur wins global award for increasing farmers’ yields with solar energy FAO: Millions of people at risk of hunger malnutrition and poverty due to climate change OPINION: Ecological farming is key to food security, climate change
The 2016 El Niño phenomenon, which was super charged by the effects of climate change, crippled rain-fed agricultural production and left over 40 million people foods insecure in Africa. Without urgent action to reduce global emissions, the occurrence of climate shocks and stresses in the Africa region are expected to get much worse. On 5 July this year, Africa is likely to have registered its hottest reliable record temperature in Ouargla, northern Algeria, of 51.3C (124.3F).[ii] There is mounting evidence that higher temperatures linked to climate change have worsened drought and humanitarian disaster in East Africa, including last year's drought which left over 13m people dangerously hungry.[iii] Even at 1.5 degrees of warming, climate impacts in West Africa would be devastating. Wheat yields could fall by up to 25 percent,[iv] and at 1.5 degrees Lagos in Nigeria could become a newly heat stressed city like Delhi in India.[v] In sub-Saharan Africa 1.5 degrees warming by the 2030s could lead to about 40 per cent of present maize cropping areas being no longer suitable for current cultivars, and significant negative impacts on sorghum suitability are projected. Under warming of less than 2 degrees by the 2050s, total crop production could be reduced by 10 percent.[vi] At 2 degrees of warming heat extremes never experienced before could affect 15 percent of sub-Saharan Africa's land area in the hot season,[vii] causing deaths and threatening farmers' ability to grow crops. If global temperature rise by more than two degrees by the end of the century, by 2050 this could see daytime temperatures in North Africa (and the Middle East) rise to 46 degrees on the hottest days, which can be deadly.[viii] |
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