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Climate Change Causes Some Extreme Weather Events: United Nations

Climate change and the risk it poses to businesses and communities has been in the headlines this week, including one article by Reuters analyst Gerard Wynn that claims “rising temperatures are driving more frequent bouts of extreme weather,” some of which we saw this year. While Wynn and others (such as myself) are in agreement that climate change is behind some extreme weather events, others continue to staunchly deny such links.

In his article, Wynn references the fact that global carbon emissions rose by a record amount last year (6%), making it the biggest one-year jump in history and proving that even though the world economy may be in tatters, ozone-depleting gasses continue to be emitted at an alarming rate. And, according to statements issued today by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), “It is virtually certain that increases in the frequency and magnitude of warm daily temperature extremes and decreases in cold extremes will occur in the 21st century on the global scale. It is likely that the frequency of heavy precipitation or the proportion of total rainfall from heavy falls will increase in the 21st century over many areas of the globe.”

The report, which the IPCC said was a scientific foundation for sound decisions on infrastructure, urban development, public health and insurance, also states that there are many options for decreasing risk, with the best options providing solutions across a wide range of possible levels of climate change.

But this is just the most recent of string of reports suggesting that human-induced climate change is linked to some severe weather events. For business to continue to prosper within the world economy, adopting a greener way of business is the only way to decrease the risk of future extreme weather events affecting organizations and society in general.

Though the Kyoto Protocol has striven to be a catalayst of global change, the United States (the world’s number two carbon emitter) is still in stubborn denial of the need to adopt such carbon-cutting measures. To that end, China, the world’s biggest carbon emitter, plans to nudge the U.S. towards more action at a South African summit later this month. Expectations, however, are low.

As the Associated Press reported today:

Top international climate scientists and disaster experts meeting in Africa had a sharp message Friday for the world’s political leaders: Get ready for more dangerous and “unprecedented extreme weather” caused by global warming.

Making preparations, they say, will save lives and money.

These experts fear that without preparedness, crazy weather extremes may overwhelm some locations, making some places unlivable.

As a climate deal is unlikely soon and emissions continue to grow, the future is grim.

 

David Phillips on Our Increasingly Erratic Weather: “Damages Will Continue to Rise Indefinitely”

[Each year, the best Canadian risk managers gather to discuss the state of the discipline at the RIMS Canada Conference. The 2011 incarnation is taking place this week in Ottawa so I will be reporting from here for the next few days.]

If you go to a conference focused on risk, you will likely hear someone talking into a microphone about climate change. If you go to a lot of these events, you will hear a similar message repeated again and again.

After a while, it can become redundant.

Don’t get me wrong — I personally think climate change is arguably the biggest risk facing the world. And obviously there has been very little progress on mitigation and adaptation, both on a societal and organizational level. So it is very important to continue to educate anyone who will listen — particularly those in the risk and insurance industry who can theoretically help discover and fund solutions.

It’s just that it has become rare to hear anything that hasn’t already been said. Temperatures are rising and ice caps are melting and this is a grave threat that, egads, nobody is doing anything about. Relaying new stats and photos of polar bears is great, but at this point, if they want to advocate for something to be done, people should probably be highlighting the fallout. That is the only way to create urgency. To make the threat real. Unfortunately, many of these speakers fail to show the tangible, detrimental effects that warmer temperatures will have on the average person (Lester Brown’s recent talk on food security notwithstanding).

I still always try to attend panels and speeches discussing the topic, but I have come to expect little more than a reminder about the severity of the problem and a plea for action. On day two of the 2011 RIMS Canada Conference in Ottawa, however, climatologist David Phillips of Environment Canada gave a very entertaining and compelling presentation on how climate change is causing erratic weather. To him, the unpredictable and unprecedented weather we will continue to see in the future will make planning and risk management of all types vastly more difficult than it is today. And an inability to project the future will affect individuals, markets, companies, governments and international relations.

He started off in humor land, highlighting Canadians’ unique obsession with their nation’s weather, something they are “secretly disgusted” by but “outwardly so proud” of. “We follow the wind chill like others follow the Dow Jones,” said Philips who also works closely with the Meteorological Service of Canada.

But he was quick to note that there is more to the Great White North than just snow and ice, despite what so many outsiders believe. The climate of the world’s second-coldest nation is actually quite diverse, comprised of basically every type there is aside from desert and rainforest. And this forces Canadians to prepare their wardrobes for any environment. “We have more clothes than people in any other country — and it’s not because we’re fashion conscious,” said Phillips. “Our GQ magazine is the Canadian Tire catalog.”

The brutal cold is certainly a reality, however. Phillips told one story about a diplomat from Australia, where he says people call Canadians “frozen Yanks,” who once came to Canada and, “as Aussies tend to do,” bought a few cases of beer for his stay. He stored it in the garage overnight and was distraught when he found it frozen rock solid the following day. “This must be the only country on Earth where you put the beer in the fridge to keep it warm,” said Phillips, recounting the diplomat’s response.

Of course, the topic at hand was much more serious than the light-hearted start of Phillips’ presentation — especially to many of the brokers and underwriters in the room. “Insurers are the first financial victims of climate change,” said Phillips.

Even worse has been the damage inflicted upon the nation’s citizens. He listed some of the worst weather disasters to hit Canada during the past decade and a half.

There was Hurricane Igor last year, which caused $200 million in damages. In 2004, it was Hurricane Juan. That storm knocked down 100 million trees in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. The remnants of Hurricane Frances also did damage that same year, dropping 137 millimeters of rain on Ontario. Oddly — and illustrating just how erratic things have gotten — had this storm not hit, it would have been the driest month on record in Ontario history.

In 2007, it was a twister. The first-ever level F5 tornado to hit Canada. And of course there was the 1996 Sagueny flood in Quebec, which was called a 10,000-year event and became the first $1 billion insurance disaster in Canadian history.

Perhaps worst of all was the great ice storm of 1998.

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I grew up in Maine and was a senior in high school when this storm hit the New England and the Canadian maritime provinces. It was bad in my state. We lost power for five days and missed an entire week of school (although I wasn’t complaining about that). The damage was even harsher further north. The heavy ice froze to power lines, knocking down enough cable in Canada to stretch across the world three times, according to Phillips. It also prompted the largest volume of claims in the history of insurance.

In short, Phillips’ message was that things have become very strange. And scientists are now comfortable concluding that warming has contributed to this increasingly odd weather. For example, storms are now 7% wetter due to “car-wash-like downpours,” and 50% of the flooding in the UK can be attributed to manmade factors, said Phillips. Why? Canada is now in its 319th month in a row in which the average temperature is above the 20th century norm. “All indicators point to the same message,” said Phillips. “The world is warming up faster than it has at any other time.”

As a result, Phillips does not believe that the recent oddities can be considered a part of some short-term trend. This isn’t a blip on the radar. This is not a stretch of bad luck. “These losses and damages will continue to rise indefinitely,” he said.

But as erratic as the weather has become, it in and of itself may not be the whole problem. It might have just as much to do with where, and how affluently, we live. “Sometimes I think we’ve changed more than the weather has,” said Phiilps.

Today, throughout the world, more people live in cities than in rural areas for the first time in human history. This means that disasters are increasingly striking major population centers — with major fallout.

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It doesn’t help that one-third of the world’s population lives within 100 kilometers of water, according to Phillips. “We’re also living where we shouldn’t be living,” he said.

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And it’s not just us — it’s all our stuff. Everyone has more possessions. And more insurance for all those possessions. Now, every driveway has three cars. When Phillips was a little kid, there might only be one in the entire neighborhood. All this contributes to larger losses when disaster does hit a city. “The dartboard is getting bigger,” said Phillips.

All these leads to great uncertainty. There has historically been an understanding that the worst-case can happen. But there has also been an expectation that even the strangest stretches of weather would, in time, return to the mean. You might have 30 days that come in 10 degrees colder than expected next winter, but the winter after that would be more typical.

This presumption is no longer realistic, however, says Phillips. There is no more mean. “The new norm is to expect the unexpected,” he said.

And that makes managing and pricing risk infinitely more difficult. “You can’t plan,” said Phillips, later adding that “we can no longer assume the past is a guide to the future.”

Exactly how organizations can incorporate this new normal into their planning is hard to say. Phillips had a few suggestions on the societal level. The first is the most obvious, oft-stated. “[We must] ween ourselves off of our insatiable demand for carbon,” he said. “Not just bury it or trade it … actually ween ourselves off of it.”

Easier said than done, obviously. His other advice is easier to implement, although admittedly still tough in an economic downturn, particularly one that is gutting the construction industry.

We need to build more resilient cities, he says, and enforce building codes. Some 50% of the damage from Hurricane Andrew, for example, could have been prevented if building codes had just been enforced.

There are no easy answers. But the key takeaway is that each organization’s long-term strategic planning must understand that erratic weather is here to stay. Those things that you used to take for granted no longer apply. And as he states, perhaps it was a Hall of Fame Yankees catcher who best described this new reality.

“I think the great philosopher Yogi Berra had it right,” said Phillips. “The future aint what it used to be.”

Lester Brown on How Climate Change Is Catastrophically Straining the Global Food Supply

Lester Brown, founder and president of the Earth Policy Institute

Throughout his distinguished career, Earth Policy Institute founder and president Lester Brown has sought to protect resources across the globe. This morning in his opening address at the World Conference on Disaster Management in Toronto, he stressed the importance of one that may now be as important as any ocean, rainforest or glacier. “Time is our scarcest resource,” said Brown on the urgency for the world to begin mitigating the effects of climate change. “How much do we have? No one knows for sure. When do we reach the point of no return. We don’t know.”

The theme of disaster prevention and catastrophe management will be at the forefront of all discussions that take place this week at the conference. But in Brown’s view, there is one disaster that supersedes all others: runaway climate change. To him, that’s “the Big D … the one that could end civilization.”

In addition to the ticking clock and the world’s inability to meaningfully cooperate on the issue, what makes the threat of climate change so catastrophic today is the volatility it places on the global food supply. More than ever, the world grain supply is being strained. And this comes at the same time that demand is increasing.

In the past, major grain surpluses for U.S. production could make up for unexpected droughts, floods or fires that wipe out crop yields in other areas of the globe. Today, however, those surpluses no longer exist. And this is likely the new normal.

To drive home his point, Brown highlighted the massive heat wave, drought and wildfires that wiped out 40% of the Russian grain harvest last summer. He said that if someone had told him before the disaster that the average temperature in Moscow in July would be 14 degrees Fahrenheit above average, he wouldn’t have believed it. “I’m not a climate denier, but that’s unreasonable,” is how he said he would have responded. “Well, that’s what happened.”

In and of itself, that supply shortage affected global prices and stressed the market. But if a similar event were to occur in Chicago? Grain prices would go through the roof.

Again, in the past, agriculture speculators could just chalk up such events as anomalies. Maybe a disaster wiped out some percentage of the global supply that year, but they could be confident that the next season would balance things out. Brown doesn’t seen that happening anymore, however. “There is no normal to go back to,” he said. “The climate is in a constant state of flux.”

And even without a single, identifiable disaster like the one in Russia, the future of the global food supply is troubling. Brown said that estimates project a 10% decrease in grain crop yields for every additional degree Celsius increase in global temperatures. “Each year, agriculture and the climate are more out of sync,” said Brown.

That’s not the only bad news on the supply side.

There is also an irrigation bubble that means today’s global output is artificially high. The United States, China and India are the three top grain-producing nations in the world. Only one-fifth of the U.S. grain yield comes from irrigated land. Even if the continually strained Colorado River basin or Mississippi River region were to dry up somewhat, the nation could still produce at nearly the same level it does today. It’s a different story in India and China, however, according to Brown.

World Bank data says that in India there are 175 million people being fed with grain produced by the over-pumping of local aquifers. The Earth Policy Institute estimates that number at 130 million in China.

It doesn’t take a scientist to see that this is unsustainable. Eventually, the aquifers that are being aggressively pumped will be depleted and, once they are, the rate of irrigation will only be able to match the natural aquifer’s rate of recovery, says Brown. So eventually the current levels will have to fall. The irrigation bubble will burst.

“That bubble has already burst in Saudi Arabia,” he said, adding that the nation will likely be out of the grain production business altogether in just a few years. Since Saudi Arabia only produces 0.5% of the world’s global grain supply, this won’t significantly hamper the global market. And if anyone can afford to import, it’s the Saudis. But this, in addition to depleting water tables throughout the the Middle East, and the bubbles in China and Israel, spells trouble.

“We are only one harvest away from chaos,” said Brown.

Additionally, demand is increasing. Throughout the developing world, particularly in India and China, there are hundreds of millions of people rising out of poverty who will greatly inflate the world’s middle class in the coming decades. Along with a larger middle class comes more people wanting to live a middle-class standard of life. Perhaps more than anything, this affluence will lead to greater food consumption. And since grain feeds both people and livestock, grain consumption per capita will only rise.

Then there are biofuels. In this sense, ethanol is a non-solution solution. It may cut down on carbon dioxide emissions. But crop yields are now being divided between the dinner plate and the gas tank.

The grim reality of all this is that, as the global food supply becomes more strained, so will nations. Food supply security is something that citizens demand from their government and if it disappears, so could the social order, leading to more failed states. “How many failing states before the whole system begins to unravel?” said Brown. “We don’t know this yet. We haven’t been there.”

And that’s the scariest part of all.

(In addition to listening to Lester Brown’s keynote address at the 2011 WCDM, I had the chance to interview him to get even more insight about climate change and the global food supply. Our Q&A will appear in the July/August issue of Risk Management magazine.)

More Springtime Disaster with Arizona Fires

As if record-setting floods in the Midwest and deadly tornadoes throughout the South and Midwest were not enough disaster for this country in the last couple of months, Arizona is now battling the second-largest blaze in the state’s history.

The blaze has burned 486 square miles of ponderosa pine forest, driven by wind gusts of more than 60 mph, since it was sparked May 29 by what authorities believe was an unattended campfire. Now more than twice the size of Chicago, the fire became the second-largest in Arizona history Tuesday. No serious injuries have been reported, but the fire has destroyed 10 structures so far. It has cast smoke as far east as Iowa and forced some planes to divert from Albuquerque, N.M., some 200 miles away.

Firefighters from as far away as New York are working day and night in attempt to slow the spread of flames. But residents and firefighters alike are understandably worried since a blaze of this size accompanied by winds of such a high speed could move the Wallow Fire to the number one spot in Arizona’s list of largest fires.

So what’s the deal with all of these wild, weather-related disasters?

According to Bill Patzert, a research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, the cause it not solely global warming, but more “global weirding.”

“Sometimes it gets wild and weird,” says Patzert. In more technical terms, weather forecasters searching for a unifying explanation point to the La Niña climate pattern, a phenomenon born far out in the Pacific Ocean that shapes weather across the globe, in combination with other atmospheric anomalies that have altered the jet stream flow of air across North America. Less famous than its warm-water climate sibling El Niño, this year’s La Niña has been “near record-breaking” in its intensity, says climate scientist Michelle L’Heureux of the Climate Prediction Center in Camp Springs, Md.

La Niña conditions occur every few years and can persist as long as two years. With the tornadoes, flooding and fires that have already ravaged parts of the U.S., and hurricane season upon us, it is unfortunately shaping up to be an active, expensive and deadly La Niña season.