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By David DICKSON
The political effect on the United States of
its failure to anticipate Hurricane Katrina’s full impact
will hopefully generate a more considered attitude to the threat
of climate change.
One side-effect of the tsunami that swept across the Indian
Ocean last December was to act as a wake-up call for government
officials who were still dragging their feet over protecting
their communities from the impacts of global warming.
Even though the two phenomena are not linked, the destruction
caused by sea level surges as far away as Somalia and the Seychelles
spurred political action, for example in changing regulations
for coastal development, in a way that no amount of scientific
research could ever have done.
With luck, the same may become true of Hurricane Katrina. Environment
groups and liberal politicians across the world have been quick
to draw the conclusions that the force of the hurricane that
struck New Orleans and other parts of the Gulf of Mexico was
a direct result of human induced climate change. Many claimed
the same was true of other recent exceptional weather conditions,
such as the fatal floods that have inundated parts of Europe
this summer.
Sceptics have responded — correctly — that there
is no hard scientific proof that climate change is to blame.
They point out that there have been many other equally destructive
hurricanes in the past, such as those that hit New Orleans in
the 1950s and 1960s.
Indeed, there is strong evidence to suggest that, following
several years that have been relatively quiet on the hurricane
front, an increase in storms was to be expected as little more
than the result of a natural 30-year cycle in hurricane intensity.
But that misses the point. Whatever the sceptics may argue,
the case linking climate change — and its potentially
destructive effects, particularly in the developing world —
both to violent storms and to human activity is now accepted
by most of the experts in the field.
To ignore this conclusion is now a political, rather than a
scientific, act. Just as the Bush administration’s decisions
have been to ignore warnings of the potential perils facing
New Orleans and the surrounding regions.
Scientific arguments
In fact, those who suggest a link between climate change and
hurricanes have some important scientific arguments of their
side. The most obvious ones lie in the dynamics of hurricanes
themselves. These are easily triggered once ocean temperatures
rise above 30 degrees Celsius, stimulated by the interaction
between warm wet air close to the surface, and the cooler air
above it.
This process does not need man-made global warming to induce
it; and to that extent president Bush and his political allies
are correct to state that hurricanes remain a natural disaster.
But clearly, the warmer the oceans become, the more likely these
conditions are to prevail.
A paper published last month in Nature, for example, by a group
of US climatologists, headed by Kerry Emanuel at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, argued that the numbers of major storms
occurring both in the Atlantic and the Pacific have grown in
both duration and intensity by about 50 per cent since the 1970s.
The researchers suggest a potential link to the fact that average
global temperatures rose by more than one degree Celsius during
this period.
Similar claims were made by another climatologist, Kevin Trenberth,
head of the climate analysis section of the US National Center
for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.
Writing in the journal Science earlier this year, he argued
that even if the frequency of hurricanes and typhoons does not
increase as the oceans warm, their intensity is likely to.
In particular, Trenberth argued that higher sea surface temperatures
in the Atlantic Ocean and increased water vapour in the lower
atmosphere — caused by global warming — are to blame
for the past decade’s intense storms.
Although Emanuel and colleagues have expressed scepticism about
whether the observed global warming is the result of increased
carbon emissions, rather than just natural variability in climate
cycles, Trenberth has been less reluctant to draw the link.
Yet this is now the majority view within the scientific community,
as expressed through the consensus on the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change.
Political damage
It is already clear that the Bush administration has inflicted
significant political damage on itself by refusing to take either
warnings of the storm threat to New Orleans — or calls
for adequate preventive action — sufficiently seriously.
Official statements about the unpredictability of such events
are disingenuous. There have been plenty of studies in recent
years outlining not only the physical threats resulting from
hurricanes, but also the inadequacy of the city’s systems
of levees — embankments raised to protect the low-lying
city from floods.
Last year, for example, shortly after New Orleans narrowly avoided
another Category 5 storm — Hurricane Ivan — scientists
at Louisiana State University were predicting that the levees
would have failed if the city had been hit directly.
Yet despite this and other warnings, the Bush administration
has, as is now widely known, been seeking major cuts in funding
for levee reconstruction and maintenance.
It is unthinkable that these cuts will not be reversed in Washington.
Faced with claims that a short-sighted focus on national security
issues following the events of 11 September 2001 has blinded
it to many other more pressing issues, the Bush administration
is now engaged in a damage limitation exercise.
But if history is not to repeat itself in New Orleans, it is
essential that a substantial part of this is a renewed commitment
to adequate prevention. And this means more than just additional
technical fixes, such as strengthened levees. Equally important
— like the planning for redevelopment that has been taking
place around the Indian Ocean since the tsunami — is the
need for a broader reassessment of strategies for coastal development.
Preventive action
Researchers at Louisiana State University, for example, have
been arguing for several years that in the long term, the best
way of mitigating the threat to New Orleans would be to restore
the barrier reefs and marshlands that lie in the delta between
the city and the Gulf of Mexico.
Their arguments have striking resonance with those claiming
that the damage caused by the tsunami was much worse than it
might have been because mangrove forests that had previously
protected coastlines had been destroyed.
Similarly, much of last year’s loss of life caused by
Hurricane Jeanne in Haiti was made significantly worse by the
effects of intense logging and the fact that many of the communities
most badly affected had been built on vulnerable hillsides.
The rain brought by the hurricane rapidly washed away much of
the remaining soil and clogged the rivers with debris, destroying
houses and communities as it rushed down hillsides.
-SciDev
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