Extreme Floods, Storms Seen Increasing in North
America
US: June 23, 2008
NEW YORK - Floods, droughts and severe storms are likely to ravage North
America more frequently as emissions of planet-warming gases rise, according
to a US government study.
Extreme weather events, "could seriously affect" human health, agricultural
production, and the availability and quality of water in the future,
according to the report, issued by the Climate Change Science Program on
Thursday.
With the Midwest battered by the worst flooding in 15 years, which has
submerged vast areas of fertile farmland and displaced thousands of people,
the report said future "heavy downpours are very likely to further increase
in frequency and intensity," in North America.
The atmosphere absorbs more water vapor as temperatures rise, raising the
likelihood of rain storms and flooding. The report said total precipitation
in the continental United States has increased 7 percent over the past
century.
Led by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, the report
was the government's widest assessment yet of how global warming may change
the climate in coming decades.
The economic and physical ramifications of the extreme weather events
forecast in the report can already be grasped by the flooding in the
Midwest, said Richard Moss, vice president for climate change at the World
Wildlife Fund.
Moss, who previously headed the CCSP coordination office, "the longer we
delay on cutting emissions, the higher the bill will be from these impacts."
The report said higher temperatures from global warming will also increase
the likelihood of severe droughts in the US Southwest, parts of Mexico, and
the Caribbean. Heat waves are more likely "over most land areas, most
pronounced over the northwestern two thirds of North America," it said.
Another government report issued on Friday and led by the Environmental
Protection Agency, said some of the effects of climate change could be
mitigated by methods like restoring vegetation along streams, increasing the
resilience of ecosystems.
President George W. Bush's climate change policy has evolved from skepticism
about the science of global warming from greenhouse gases to calling in
April for a halt in the growth of carbon emissions growth by 2025.
But that falls short of targets agreed in the Kyoto Protocol, signed by all
developed nations except the United States. The world is now trying to form
a successor agreement to Kyoto by late 2009. (Reporting by Timothy Gardner,
editing by Chris Wilson)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

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