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Caught in a perfect storm

Adapting to climate change is exceedingly costly, especially for Pakistan

Daily Dateline Islamabad by Daily Dateline Islamabad
September 12, 2022
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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan can’t win for losing. The South Asian country of over 230 million people was already hit by a perfect storm of economic and political difficulties this year; it has now been devastated by the most severe and catastrophic flooding in recent memory.
Over 1,400 people and 800,000 livestock have died, about 1 million homes have been destroyed, and more than 33 million people have been adversely impacted by the floods. One-third of the nation is underwater right now, and the government forecasts an economic impact of more than $10 billion due to these floods.
These shocking facts and staggering expenditures associated with rehabilitation exemplify what a climate catastrophe looks like at 1.2-degree Celsius of global warming since industrialisation.
However, recent geopolitical developments show that global warming will likely surpass 3.5-degree Celsius. Developed countries reneging on their climate obligations is one of the significant fallouts of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, resulting in fresh investments in oil and gas, which Climate Action Tracker says might lock the globe into “irreversible warming.”
The IPCC estimates that the world has become so hot that its temperature will likely exceed the limits suggested by the Paris Accord, and “deadly weather is already baked into our imminent future.” For Pakistan, the situation is significantly worse since it is situated in a region where average temperatures are projected to rise faster than anywhere else in the world, by almost 4-degree Celsius by 2100.
It is too early to tell how much of these floods were caused by global warming, but it is reasonable to assume that climate change was a significant contributing factor. While several factors might set off floods, human-caused climate change, ensuing extreme precipitation, and glacier retreat have increased the frequency and severity of South Asia’s monsoon seasons in recent years.
What the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres refers to as a “monsoon on steroids” is only one among a succession of extreme weather events that have struck Pakistan. Over the last few decades, severe weather in Pakistan has become the norm rather than the exception. The other, often disregarded, factor is social engineering. Pakistan is highly vulnerable to climate change consequences due to widespread deforestation, unregulated urbanisation in flood-prone regions, soil erosion, and inadequate investment in mitigation and adaptation.
In the case of Manchar Lake, studies show that water and vegetation rates have dropped annually since the early 2000s due to unplanned growth, decreasing precipitation, and anthropogenic activities leading to increased dry land. A pre-independence breach created to prevent lake overflow had been filled in recent years. Consequently, a similar breach had to be made by authorities on September 4, 2022, displacing over 135,000 people and affecting 400 settlements. It is plausible to argue that this low resilience is partially the consequence of poor governance and the country’s failure to effectively equip itself to meet the challenges of frequent climatic extremes.
However, the issue extends beyond ineptitude and lack of political will. Adapting to climate change is exceedingly costly, especially for a developing country like Pakistan, which is already burdened with innumerable economic issues. Pakistan simply lacks the budgetary flexibility to pay for a significant decrease in climate vulnerability. – Agencies

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