| Floods And Drought To Rise Due To Climate Change 
    
 HUNGARY: April 10, 2008
 
 
 BUDAPEST - Flooding in temperate regions and the tropics and droughts in 
    arid regions are likely to increase over the course of the century due to 
    climate change, according to a study released on Wednesday.
 
 
 The study by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the body which 
    won last year's Nobel Prize with former US Vice President Al Gore, said 
    changes in fresh water supplies would have a huge impact on humans and on 
    the environment.
 
 "The frequency of heavy precipitation events (or proportion of total 
    rainfall from heavy falls) will very likely increase over most areas during 
    the 21st century, with consequences to the risk of rain-generated floods," 
    the report, released at the IPCC's annual meeting in Budapest, said.
 
 "At the same time, the proportion of land surface in extreme drought at any 
    one time is projected to increase," it said.
 
 The report comes at a time when the price of food staples such as rice and 
    wheat are increasing sharply due to rising demand from Asia and poor 
    harvests due to bad weather.
 
 In the Philippines, for example, rice is the staple food of 83 percent of 
    the population and imports have doubled in the past decade, according to a 
    report from investment bank Credit Suisse.
 
 That is estimated to cost the government $1.3 billion in 2008, the bank 
    said, as it subsidises the difference between the world market price and the 
    price at which rice is sold domestically.
 
 That situation is repeated in many developing countries and will likely be 
    worsened by climate change, Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United 
    Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, told journalists in 
    Budapest.
 
 He said by 2020, unless action was taken to mitigate the effects of climate 
    change, 250 million people in Africa could be suffering from "water stress", 
    which means lack of access to adequate water for drinking and agriculture.
 
 That is a problem that will spread beyond the continent and create a major 
    challenge for governments globally, he said.
 
 "The risk is that these people can no longer sustain themselves and they 
    have to find somewhere else to go," de Boer said.
 
 (Editing by Mary Gabriel)
 
 
 Story by David Chance
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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