Disasters Quadruple Over Last 20 Years - Oxfam
UK: November 26, 2007
LONDON - Weather-related disasters have quadrupled over the last two
decades, a leading British charity said in a report published on Sunday.
From an average of 120 disasters a year in the early 1980s, there are now as
many as 500, with Oxfam attributing the rise to unpredictable weather
conditions cause by global warming.
"This year we have seen floods in South Asia, across the breadth of Africa
and Mexico that have affected more than 250 million people," said Oxfam's
director Barbara Stocking.
"This is no freak year. It follows a pattern of more frequent, more erratic,
more unpredictable and more extreme weather events that are affecting more
people.
The number of people affected by disasters has risen by 68 percent, from an
average of 174 million a year between 1985 to 1994 to 254 million a year
between 1995 to 2004.
"Action is needed now to prepare for more disasters otherwise humanitarian
assistance will be overwhelmed and recent advances in human development will
go into reverse," Stocking said.
Oxfam wants the UN conference on Climate Change in Bali in December to agree
a mandate to negotiate a global deal to provide assistance to developing
countries to cope with the impacts of climate change and reduce green house
gas emissions. (Reporting by John Sinnott, Editing by Elizabeth Piper)
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