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Climate change may stoke Africa

2008-04-23 11:27
line

Accra - Climate change in Africa could leave 250 million more people short of water by 2020, spurring conflicts and threatening stability on the world's poorest continent, said the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize winner on Tuesday.

Rajendra K Pachauri, chairperson of the United Nations panel of climate experts who shared the prize with former United States vice-president Al Gore last year, said the responsibility lay with wealthy developed nations to curb their carbon emissions.

Pachauri said: "If the situation in Africa is a scar on the conscience of the world, then if the world has a conscience it has to remove that scar."

"Reasons of equity and ethics clearly require that developed countries must do more and there is also an issue of enlightened self interest because you cannot have a large continent like Africa being neglected," he added, speaking on the sidelines of a UN trade and development conference in Ghana.

Climate to threaten governments

The Indian scientist warned that Africa's one billion people were among the most at risk from climate change because of the existing environmental pressures on the continent caused by lack of food and water, desertification and flash flooding.

He said: "Unfortunately, the impact of climate is going to be most likely so harmful that it would threaten governments.

"With water scarcity, the threat of conflict and the threat of competition for scarce resources will grow substantially and all of these are incompatible with good governance."

Pachauri, head of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, cited research showing that by 2020 between 75 million and 250 million people in Africa would be suffering from additional water stress due to climate change.

Farmers who depended on rain-fed agriculture were likely to see declines of 50% in their yields by 2020, he warned.

Maintenance of peace

In recent decades, wars in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia and Sierra Leone had involved battles to control valuable mineral resources, such as diamonds, gold and coltan.

Pachauri said in the future water and food could be the most valuable resources. Some experts already linked the conflict in Sudan's Darfur to competition over access to food and water.

He said: "Climate change has the potential to be a problem for the maintenance of peace."

"You'll have movement of populations which of course carries with it the seed of conflict, accentuated by the fact that there would be a lack of food availability in general."

A dramatic rise in global food prices this year, which had sparked unrest from Africa to Asia and the Caribbean, had topped the agenda of the UN conference in Ghana.

Pachauri said there was a risk of Africa falling into a vicious circle, where good governance was needed to alleviate poverty but climate change and resource competition fostered conflict and corruption.

"What is the answer? The answer is for developed nations to realise that we are living on one planet. We are all inhabitants of spaceship earth," he said.

Pachauri hoped Western governments could agree on a mechanism for carbon pricing under the Kyoto agreement by the end of 2009, which would give a major boost to low-carbon technologies and sharply reduce emissions.

"But we are nowhere close yet," he said.

Developing countries for their part should also move away from centralised, energy-intensive infrastructure to a model more suited to their conditions, Pachauri said.

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Latest comment in Sci-Tech

colin.megson says... Let coal decline - we all want it to. But for nuclear, the answer is so simple - generate our electricity and process heat using high temperature reactors which, if the 'waste' heat can't be put to a useful purpose, can be air cooled. However, high temperature 'waste' heat can be used to desalinate, to produce vast quantities of potable water from brackish groundwater and seawater. It can also be used to implement a hydrogen economy, whereby all liquid fuels can be made carbon neutral, by using atmospheric CO2 in their production. Likewise carbon-neutral ammonia can be made from atmospheric N2 and used as feed stock for fertilisers, to maintain agricultural production to feed 9 billion people. There is one outstanding reactor that can do all of this and also is inherently safe - it shuts down according to the laws of physics, even if all safety systems and all electrics are lost. The fuel in the reactor core starts life in the molten state, so no more TMI or Fukushima-Diiachi style meltdowns. It operates at atmospheric pressure, so there is no high powered 'driver' available to expel radiotoxic substances upwards and outwards into the environment. Also, its fuel is thorium - 3½ X more common than uranium and in sufficient abundance to be economically available until the end of time. This silver-bullet answer to the most significant problems facing humankind, is the Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR). Google: LFTRs to Power the Planet for all of the benefits. Read the article...

 
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