5 November 2006 – Increased international assistance
will be needed to support efforts by African countries to cope with the effects
of climate change, including loss of infrastructure, a decline in food
production, and the degradation of wildlife habitat, says a United Nations
report released today on the eve of a global meeting in Nairobi on the issue.
The report found that an estimated 30 per cent of
Africa’s coastal infrastructure could be inundated, including coastal
settlements in the Gulf of Guinea, Senegal, Gambia and Egypt. It warned that
that between 25 per cent and over 40 per cent of species’ habitats in Africa
could be lost by 2085.
Released by the Secretariat of the UN Framework
Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) based on data from such agencies as the UN
Environment Programme (UNEP) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO),
the new report was issued as representative of the 189 Parties to the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change convene in Nairobi for the first talks on
the matter to be held in sub-Saharan Africa.
Adaptation to climate change, as well as talks on
measures to reduce the emissions that contribute to climate change, will be
major focuses of the Nairobi discussions.
“Climate change is underway,” said UNEP Executive
Director Achim Steiner, “and the international community must respond by
offering well-targeted assistance to those countries in the front-line which are
facing increasing impacts such as extreme droughts and floods and threats to
infrastructure from phenomena like rising sea levels.”
WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud noted that Africa
is the largest of all tropical landmasses and, at 30 million square kilometres,
is about a fifth of the world's total land area. Yet, he said, “the climate
observing system in Africa is in a far worse and deteriorating state than that
of any other continent.”
Latest estimates indicate that about 25 per cent out of
the Global Climate Observing System surface stations in east and southern Africa
are not working and most of the remaining stations are functioning in a less
than optimal manner. Around a fifth of the 10 upper air network stations are in
a similar state. Mr. Jarraud said Africa needs about 200 automatic weather
stations, a major effort to rescue historical data, and improved training on
climate and weather reporting.
Yvo de Boer, Executive Secretary of the UNFCCC, said it
was critical to move from principles to action. “It will also be important to do
further work to better understand how adaptation relates to efforts aimed at
poverty eradication,” he said.
Fighting climate change requires a two-tier attack,
officials said, noting that while adaptation is important, it is also critical
that greenhouse gas emissions are cut by an eventual 80 per cent in order to
stabilize the atmosphere for current and future generations.
Source: UN News Service
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