(Geneva) More than a hundred million extremely poor people are threatened by accelerating global warming in Africa, where scarce glaciers are expected to be gone by the 2040s, the UN said on Tuesday.
In a report on the State of the Climate in Africa published less than two weeks before the opening of COP 26 in Glasgow, the UN highlights Africa’s disproportionate vulnerability and stresses that climate change has contributed to worsen food insecurity, poverty and population displacement on the continent last year.
“By 2030, it is estimated that up to 118 million extremely poor people (that is, living on less than $ 1.90 a day) will be exposed to drought, flooding and extreme heat in Africa if adequate measures are not taken, ”said African Union (AU) Commission Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, Josefa Leonel Correia Sacko, in the report’s foreword. .
“In sub-Saharan Africa, climate change could lead to an additional 3% drop in gross domestic product by 2050,” she added.
This report, coordinated by the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO), is the result of collaboration with the AU Commission, the Economic Commission for Africa and various international and regional scientific organizations and Nations. united.
“During the year 2020, climate indicators in Africa have been characterized by a continuous increase in temperatures, an acceleration of sea level rise, extreme weather and climate phenomena, such as floods, landslides and droughts, and the associated devastating impacts, ”WMO Secretary General Petteri Taalas explained in the foreword.
“The rapid melting of the last glaciers in East Africa, which is expected to be complete in the near future, alerts us to an imminent and irreversible change in the Earth system,” he said. it belongs.
“Green and sustainable recovery”
Last year, Africa warmed faster than the global average, land and ocean combined. The year 2020 is thus positioned between the third and the eighth hottest year on record on the continent, according to the report.
The 30-year warming trend for the period 1991-2020 was higher than that of the period 1961-1990 in all African sub-regions and significantly higher than that of the period 1931-1960.
The rates of sea level rise along the tropical and South Atlantic coasts as well as the Indian Ocean are, for their part, higher than the global average rate.
As for the African glaciers, although too small to serve as important water reservoirs, they have a major tourist and scientific importance, their current rate of retreat is higher than the world average. According to the WMO, if this trend continues, “it will lead to total deglaciation by the 2040s”.
Only three mountains in Africa are covered with glaciers: the Mount Kenya Massif (Kenya), the Rwenzori Mountains (Uganda) and Mount Kilimanjaro (Tanzania).
To prepare for the intensification of high-impact hazardous climate phenomena, WMO calls on Africa to invest in hydrometeorological infrastructure and early warning systems.
The organization believes that the rapid implementation of adaptation strategies in Africa will boost economic development and generate more jobs to support economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, and calls for fostering a “sustainable and green recovery ” from the continent.