G.S. Mudur
New Delhi, Dec. 10:
India, Bangladesh and
Pakistan are among potential hot spots where climate change could
aggravate tensions, trigger violence and spawn conflict, a report
released at the Bali climate meet warned today.
Extreme weather events, melting
glaciers and sea-level
rise, and an increasing number of climate refugees could overwhelm
countries, according to the report prepared by German and Swiss
researchers.
“Climate change will overstretch many societies’ adaptive capacities…
this could result in violence jeopardising national and international
security to a new degree,” said Hans Schellnhuber, the director of the
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and lead author of the
report.
In South Asia, Himalayan glacial retreat will threaten water supply,
monsoon changes could harm crops, and sea-level rise and cyclones could
threaten towns along the densely populated Bay of Bengal, the report
said.
A dancer performs at the main venue of
the UN climate conference. (AP)
“These dynamics will increase the social crisis potential in a region
already characterised by cross-border conflicts (India and Pakistan),
unstable governments (Pakistan and Bangladesh) and Islamism,” it said.
The report, produced by the German Advisory Council on Global Change,
was rleased by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) at the
Bali climate change conference today.
“Climate change is perhaps the most high profile among environmental
challenges facing the world and security of communities and countries,”
said Achim Steiner, the executive director of the UNEP.
In South Asia and North Africa, where farmland is already
over-exploited, any drop in crop production because of global warming
of 2 to 4 degrees Celsius may lead to regional food crises and collapse
of social systems, and intensify violent conflicts, it said.
The report predicted that climate change would trigger conflicts over
the distribution of water and land, the management of migration, and
compensation payments between countries responsible for climate change
and countries suffering its destructive effects.
The worst-affected countries are likely to invoke the “polluter pays”
principle, so international controversy over a global compensation
regime for climate change would probably intensify, the report said.
In addition to industrialised countries, emerging economies such as
China, India and Brazil may also be called upon to pay by other
developing countries whose own emissions are much less.
The report has pinpointed North Africa, southern Africa, Central Asia,
China, the Gulf of Mexico region, the Amazon and the Andes as other
potential hot spots for climate-change induced violence.
The triggers at each hot spot may be unique or shared by others — water
scarcity, harvest failures, increased frequency of cyclones, loss of
forests, loss of glaciers and a drop in farm productivity.
In April this year, the UN Security Council had held its first-ever
debate on the likely impact of climate change on peace and security.
The meeting, called by the UK, had examined how energy, security and
climate could be linked but had also drawn criticism from some
delegates who argued that climate change was a socio-economic issue
that needed to be dealt with by the UN General Assembly and not the
Security Council.
China’s delegate Liu Zhenmin was among those who had argued that the
council was not the proper forum for a debate on climate change.
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1071211/asp/frontpage/story_8654766.asp
Copyright © 2006 The
Telegraph.