Everybody talks about the
weather, but nobody does anything about it. That old quip, often attributed to
Mark Twain or his friend Charles Dudley Warner, now guides most news coverage
of severe weather. The media say that natural disasters are a result of climate
change and we need to adopt radical policies to combat them.
But this framing tells only a
small part of what is scientifically known. Take the recent flooding in Germany
and Belgium, which many, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, are blaming
on climate change. Yet a new study of more than 10,000 rivers around the world
shows that most rivers now flood less. What used to be a 50-year flood in the
1970s happens every 152 years today, likely due to urbanization, flood-control
measures, and changes in climate.
Some rivers still flood, and
reporters flock there, but more scare stories don’t mean more global flooding.
The river Ahr, where most of the German flood deaths occurred, had a
spectacular flow on July 14, 2021, but it was lower than deadly flows in 1804
and 1910. The real cause of increased fatalities from riverine flooding in
Germany and many other places is more people building settlements on flood
plains, leaving the water no place to go. Instead of more solar panels and wind
turbines to combat climate change, riverside communities need better water
management. And foremost, they need a well-functioning warning system so they
can evacuate before disaster strikes.
Here, Germany has failed
spectacularly. Following the deadly European floods in 2002, Germany built an
extensive warning system, but during a test last September, most warning
measures, including sirens and text alerts, didn’t work. The European Flood
Awareness System predicted the floods nine days in advance and formally warned
the German government four days in advance, yet most people on the ground were
left unaware. Hannah Cloke, the hydrologist who set up the system, called it “a
monumental failure.”
But of course, blaming the deadly
floods on climate change, instead of taking responsibility for the missed early
warnings, is convenient for politicians like Ms. Merkel, who, during a visit to
Schuld, a devastated village on the Ahr, said, ”We must get faster in the
battle against climate change.”
Similarly, climate change is
often blamed for wildfires in the U.S., but the reason for them is mostly poor
forest management like failing to remove flammable undergrowth and allowing
houses to be built in fire-prone areas. Despite breathless climate reporting,
in 2021 the burned area to date is the fourth-lowest of the past 11 years. The
area that burned in 2020 was only 11% of the area that did in the early 1900s.
Contrary to climate clichés, the annual global burned area has declined since 1900
and continues to fall.
We have data on global deaths
from all climate-related weather disasters such as floods, droughts, storms and
fire from the International Disaster Database. In the 1920s, these disasters
killed almost half a million people on average each year. The current climate
narrative would suggest that natural disasters are ever deadlier, but that
isn’t true. Over the past century, climate-related deaths have dropped to fewer
than 20,000 on average each year, even though the global population has
quadrupled since 1920.
And look at 2021, which is now
being branded the year of climate catastrophes. Add the deaths from the North
American heat dome, from floods in Germany and Belgium, from Indian
climate-related catastrophes that you may not have heard about, and from more
than 200 other catastrophes. Adjusted to a full year, climate-related weather
disasters could cause about 6,000 deaths in 2021. With greater wealth and
technological development, we no longer see half a million or even 18,000 lives
lost to climate-related weather disasters, but 6,000.
Every death is a tragedy, yet
current warming is avoiding many more tragedies.
One of the few well-documented
effects of climate change are more heatwaves, which have made headlines around
the world this summer. But global warming also reduces cold waves, which kill
many more people globally than heatwaves, according to a new study in the
Lancet.
According to the study, temperature increases
over the past two decades in the U.S. and Canada cause about 7,200 more heat
deaths a year. But the study also shows that warming prevents about 21,000 cold
deaths a year. Globally, the study shows that climate change annually causes
almost 120,000 additional heat deaths but avoids nearly 300,000 cold deaths.
Climate change is a real problem
we should fix. But we can’t rely on apocalyptic stories when crafting policy.
We must see all the data.
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