14 November 2006 – Warning that by 2040 the world
could witness a year in which losses from droughts, storms surges, hurricanes
and floods hit $1 trillion, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
today called for new kinds of insurance and financing, including public-private
partnerships, to help developing countries adapt to climate change.
“Widespread insurance cover has been generally confined
to developed countries where consumers, businesses and industry have in the past
been able to pay for premiums,” UNEP said in launching its new report –
“Adaptation and Vulnerability to Climate Change: The Role of the Finance
Sector,” produced by its Finance Initiative (UNEP
FI) .
“However, the time has come to forge public-private
partnerships to bring new kinds of creative financial instruments to developing
countries where the impacts of climate change are likely to hit hardest,” it
added, quoting insurers and banks.
“Otherwise, the costs of coping with a rising tide of
full scale, climate-linked, natural disasters could outstrip current levels of
humanitarian aid putting increasing strain on international aid budgets.”
The report, launched during the final week of the UN
Climate Convention in Nairobi, Kenya, cites figures showing estimated overall
losses of nearly $13 billion from typhoons which struck China, Japan and the
Philippines just from July to September this year.
In Africa, the ongoing drought and floods in Ethiopia
and Somalia have left some 280,000 people homeless. Since 2005 the drought has
affected an estimated 3 million people.
“It seems likely that there will be a ‘peak year’ that
will record losses of over $1 trillion before 2040,” the report says. “In fact,
since so much development is taking place in coastal zones, the figure may
arrive considerably before 2040.”
It cites some promising initiatives already underway,
including one by the UN World Food Programme (WFP) that cover that covered
Ethiopian farmers during the March to October season and was designed to pay out
if rainfall fell below a key threshold via a finance instrument known as a
“weather derivative.”
The pilot scheme, involving a UNEP FI member called AXA,
the World Bank and the United States Government, was aimed at preventing
communities spiralling into chronic poverty and aid dependency due to drought.
Other projects are being examined to help pastoralists, with payments triggered
when the condition and availability of forage for livestock deteriorate below a
pre-determined point.
The report also highlights how microfinance institutions
in India, working with the re-insurer Swiss Re, are helping farmers in Andhra
Pradesh use “weather hedges” against lower than expected monsoon rains.
Community-wide cover of around $150,000 is in place for an annual premium of
just $1,600.
Source: UN News Service
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