Climate Change in South America (original) (raw)

Climate Change in Latin America

Latin American Perspectives, 2016

Climate change is the gravest and most complex problem impacting the planet and its people in the twenty-first century. For thousands of years the Earth’s temperature has remained within a range that makes human life possible in a biodiverse ecosystem of interdependent species. Since the dawn of the industrial era we have seen increasing alteration in temperatures as a consequence of global warming, provoked by increasing carbon dioxide emissions from the fossil energy usage that has characterized the so-called Anthropocene Era. We have gone from an atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration of 280 parts per million in the preindustrial era (reference year 1750) to around 400 parts per million in 2015, and that has produced an increase in mean temperature.

Global Warming and Climate Change in South America

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2017

Global warming presents one of the most serious threats to South American nations. These countries are at risk of a variety of climate change related problems: rising sea levels, diminishing potable water supplies, forest fires, intense storms and flooding, heat waves, and the spread of diseases. These disasters are occurring more frequently in the region and will likely increase in intensity also. The armed forces in the region, the only government departments with both the capacity and the manpower to respond to these massive catastrophes, has to assist civil authorities with these kinds of natural disasters. This type of support to civilian authorities will occur more frequently and under more severe conditions as climate change conditions worsen.

Climate change and Southern theologies. A Latin American insight. (As alterações climáticas e as teologias do sul. Uma visão da América Latina) - DOI: 10.5752/P.2175-5841.2010v8n17p45

HORIZONTE, 2010

A luta pela justiça e libertação encontra-se no centro dos movimentos e das reflexões teológicas latino-americanas há décadas. De que modo os movimentos sociais, os líderes políticos, os teólogos e os cristãos tratam atualmente os desafios da mudança climática? Como eles os relacionam com o contexto global? O presente artigo, baseado numa apresentação feita pelo autor para uma audiência nórdica européia, apresenta a gênesis e a matriz das teologias latino-americanas e alguns de seus principais expoentes, como Leonardo Boff, Juan Luis Segundo e Gustavo Gutierrez. Destaca também os novos empreendimentos que permitem uma abordagem dos assuntos relacionados às mudanças climáticas, chamados de teologias indígenas, eco-teologias, teologia e economia e teologia ecofeminista, construídos a partir das publicações de teólogos como Boff e Ivone Gebara. Em seguida, o autor destaca alguns dos principais componentes dessa relação, enfocando o imperativo ético de justiça climática, a renovada teologia da criação e a dimensão espiritual da abordagem.

Up in Smoke? Latin America and the Caribbean: The Threat From Climate Change to the Environment and Human Development

2006

The report confirms that largely regular and predictable temperature and rainfall patterns, are changing, becoming less predictable and often more extreme. It catalogues the impact of climate change and environmental degradation ranging from drought in the Amazon to floods in Haiti and elsewhere; vanishing glaciers in Colombia to extreme cold in the Andes; and hurricanes, not only in Central America and the Caribbean, but also in southern Brazil. Across the region the capacity of natural ecosystems to act as buffers against extreme weather events and other shocks is being undermined leaving people more vulnerable. The report, with a foreword by Juan Mayr, one of the world's leading environmentalists and former Colombian Environment Minister, calls on wealthy, developed countries to take responsibility for the damage that climate change is already causing, to reduce and stabilise emissions and, critically, for a new development model for Latin America and the Caribbean that will ...

Climate Variability and Change in South America: ENSO, Decadal Variability and Climate Change in South America: Trends, Teleconnections, and Potential Impacts; Guayaquil, Ecuador, 12–14 October 2010

2010

El Niño and the Southern Oscillation (ENSO) have profound effects on South American climate. Warm ENSO events (El Niños) and cold ENSO events (La Niñas), which occur on year-to-year time scales, are associated with droughts, floods, and other extreme weather events across the continent. Anthropogenic greenhouse gas warming of the planet will also likely have a profound effect on South America, through both gradual shifts in the baseline climate and increases in extreme events, including possible changes in the ENSO cycle. There are indications that climate change may already be having an impact in South America, with temperature trends observed in the Galápagos and in the altiplano of the northern Andes and in the shrinking of tropical mountain glaciers. There has also been a shift in the behavior of El Niño, with an increased tendency for warm sea surface temperature anomalies to be concentrated in the central Pacific rather than in the LETTER Tipping Points, Great and Small

Understanding the potential impact of Climate Change and Variability in Latin America and the Caribbean

Countries in Latin American and the Caribbean (LAC) are significantly affected by adverse consequences from climate variability and extremes, particularly the ENSO events. The Region’s economy is strongly dependent on natural resources linked to climate, and patterns of income distribution and environmental degradation are a constraint for adaptation and exacerbate the impacts for specific sub-regions, countries and populations. However, only 19% of the climate-related damage costs have been quantified for the period 2000-2005 accounting for 0.15% of GDP. Thus, actual average yearly costs could reach up to ?0.7% of GDP. Estimated damages due to warming by the 2050s vary from ?1.3% to 7% of GDP, suggesting that the impacts of projected climate changes are important enough to be taken into account in planning initiatives. Based on vulnerability and consumption indicators related to past and future global warming, the LAC region can be placed close to the world’s average indicating lower vulnerability within non-Annex 1 countries’ average. Vulnerability indices place Haiti, Bolivia, Honduras, Nicaragua, Ecuador, El Salvador, Belize, Paraguay, Guyana and the small Caribbean states as the most vulnerable countries. Focused primarily on LAC region and sub-regional scales, Section I describe summarily the potential direct impacts of climate change and variability on: Income, in terms of GDP generation, damages on infrastructure, and specifically on agriculture sector issues; human development, particularly related to human health; and, the environment, specifically biodiversity, water resources and coastal zones. Country-level relevant examples (i.e. climate-related disasters, past and current variability) and, particularly, the current situation in relation to economic, human and natural system indicators are given as to illustrate on the type of climate risks and the scope for and constraints to adaptation that the Region faces. This is mainly the approach in Section II. The considered sub-regions are named as follows: Brazil-Bz; Andean countries-AC; Rio de la Plata-RP; Mexico and Central America-MA; and the CaribbeanCb (fig. 1). Peer-reviewed literature; NationalnCommunications to the UNFCC; data-bases and reports were the sources for the present work. Section I - Future climate change. This section deals with the quantification of impacts linked to Increases in global average temperatures, 1°C - 6°C, and the associated sea level rise (SLR), changes in precipitation, and increase in extreme weather events. Socio-economic scenarios without climate change and expected climate changes are summarised in tables 1 and 2 respectively.Countries in Latin American and the Caribbean (LAC) are significantly affected by adverse consequences from climate variability and extremes, particularly the ENSO events. The Region’s economy is strongly dependent on natural resources linked to climate, and patterns of income distribution and environmental degradation are a constraint for adaptation and exacerbate the impacts for specific sub-regions, countries and populations. However, only 19% of the climate-related damage costs have been quantified for the period 2000-2005 accounting for 0.15% of GDP. Thus, actual average yearly costs could reach up to ?0.7% of GDP. Estimated damages due to warming by the 2050s vary from ?1.3% to 7% of GDP, suggesting that the impacts of projected climate changes are important enough to be taken into account in planning initiatives. Based on vulnerability and consumption indicators related to past and future global warming, the LAC region can be placed close to the world’s average indicating lower vulnerability within non-Annex 1 countries’ average. Vulnerability indices place Haiti, Bolivia, Honduras, Nicaragua, Ecuador, El Salvador, Belize, Paraguay, Guyana and the small Caribbean states as the most vulnerable countries. Focused primarily on LAC region and sub-regional scales, Section I describe summarily the potential direct impacts of climate change and variability on: Income, in terms of GDP generation, damages on infrastructure, and specifically on agriculture sector issues; human development, particularly related to human health; and, the environment, specifically biodiversity, water resources and coastal zones. Country-level relevant examples (i.e. climate-related disasters, past and current variability) and, particularly, the current situation in relation to economic, human and natural system indicators are given as to illustrate on the type of climate risks and the scope for and constraints to adaptation that the Region faces. This is mainly the approach in Section II. - Recent past and current climate variability Climate and climate impacts. ENSO signal is strong in most LAC. During El Niño high rainfallnoften occurs in the AC and in the RP basin, followed by floods, whereas drought occurs in the NE-Bz and wide regions over Amazonia. La Niña usually has a shift in signal. In Brazil, Uruguay and NE Argentina there is also a signal from tropical Atlantic sea surface temperature anomalies, affecting seasonal climate, especially the actual precipitation patterns. Sub-regions have different records in terms of disaster occurrence and impacts. About 50% of the disasters occur in SA as well as 65% of the fatalities, 75% of the population affected and 53% of total damages. Nevertheless, SA’s exposure to risk is less than in MA or the Cb. MA has a greater proportion of population killed than SA does and the Cb has a greater proportion of affected population than SA. In terms of damages, cumulative losses for 1970-99 represent only 3.9% of the combined GDP of SA countries, whereas they amount to 43% for the Cb. The number of climate-related disasters per year between the periods 1970-99 and 2000-2005 increased by 2.4 times, continuing the trend observed during the 1990s. Likewise, during the latter period the quantification of damages only attained 19% of all disasters. The occurrence of wind-storms, river floods and droughts during the period 1970-2005 was around 9, 14 and 2 per year (Table 4), increased since the 1990’ and totalised 82% of natural disasters. Their estimated damages on agriculture were $ 40, 36 and 11 bn respectively due to decreases in both crops and livestock production. The three of them affected land conservation and livelihood quality. The affected rural population was 30, 50 and 66% respectively. Droughts in particular affected planted surface, grasslands, eco-services, employment, BoP and widened social inequity. Floods increased hydro-power generation by 20 -30 % and droughts decreased generation by 30-60%. Losses in fluvial transportation in the Magdalena river (Colombia) during low-waters associated with El Niño 1997 attained $ 3.9 M. The impact of floods on infrastructure totalised around $ 40 bn for the period 1970-2005, 20% of which on roads and bridges. STERN DRAFT: Understanding the potential Impact of Climate Change and Variability in Latin America and the Caribbean Nagy-Caffera-Aparicio-Barrenechea-Bidegain-Giménez-Lentini-Magrin-Murgida-Nobre-Ponce-Travasso-Villamizar-Wehbe 4 As for human development, the impact of floods on life exposure (in N b of people), physical exposure (in % of population) and killed people (per M exposed) was around 2,000, 20 and 34 per year respectively. Since 2003 economic losses related to climate disasters have dramatically increased, i.e. a 2- 3% decrease in GDP in MA and the Cb due to wind-storms (i.e. Hurricane Emily), and $ 0.9 bn loss in crops in Argentina due to a persistent drought affecting SSA since 2004/2005. Most environmental effects have not been estimated yet. Scope for and constraints to adaptation Income. Investment is still increasing too low to fuel the economies as to solve employment and population’s general well-being problems. Skewed income distribution and poverty will continue to be the sources of constraints to adaptation. Agriculture contributes 8% to the region’s GDP, employs 30-40% of people and is the main source of exports in many countries. During the last few years extreme events disturbed the sector and food security risks increased in several countries as a consequence of successive economic crisis and extreme events, raising the vulnerability especially among the poor. Fossil fuels account for 54% of primary energy and hydro-power generation 22%. The dependency of the electrical systems on hydro-power is 57%, thus they are highly dependent on water resources. However, it is likely that the region will be able to satisfy increasing demands by means of new dams’ construction and interconnected transmission networks. Also, alternative sources of energy such as biomass, solar and nuclear should likely expand under high demand scenarios from < 5% in 2004 to about 10% in 2050 and 20% in 2080. Human Development. LAC population is changing to a more urbanised, elderly, and with a lower rate of growth society. Population’s yearly growth rate decreased from 2.7% in 1950 to 1.5% in 2000 and will decreaseto 1.0 – 1.3% by 2050. Growth is greater in central age-classes and will turn to an increase of the class > 60 years by 2050, a situation that will require both developing production and employment policies and new responses for elderly protection. As for the access to drinking water, the AC sub-region shows the highest vulnerability and this situation may be exacerbated under the expected changes in water availability. There is higher vulnerability in rural areas where drinking water coverage is 69%, against 95% in urban areas. Nevertheless, the latter are affected by insufficient access to water and sanitation services involving particularly poor population in large cities. Glacier melting impacts are greater during the dry season.

The Climate Emergency in Latin America and the Caribbean

ECLAC Books

The text is based on research carried out by ECLAC between 2009 and 2019, forming a corpus that merits the summarized presentation offered here. The documentation built up over this long reference 4 Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) B. The impact of rising sea levels on the Caribbean and Central America .

Climate Change: A Research Agenda for Latin America and the Caribbean

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2000

The objective of this research agenda is to outline the issues that need to be investigated in order to produce an informed assessment of what strategies and policies Latin America and its international organizations should pursue with respect to climate change. This report makes the three following potential contributions: i) identifying actions that could be valuable but have not been highlighted; ii) advising on actions that could be ineffective and costly, given limited resources; and iii) recommending an evaluation of what elements require further analysis before objectives are translated into action. After introducing the issues involved, the report presents a simplified model to help explain the interaction of climate change with the economy. The discussion then turns to several of the most important relevant issues in terms of the model. Finally, individual items are discussed in order to construct an agenda.

Health and Climate Change in South America The Lancet Countdown South America: increasing health opportunities by identifying the gaps in health and climate change research

Lancet Americas , 2023

South America is experiencing the effects of climate change, including extreme weather events and changes in temperature and precipitation patterns. These effects interact with existing social vulnerabilities, exacerbating their impact on the health and wellbeing of populations. This viewpoint highlights four main messages from the series, which presented key gaps from five different perspectives of health and climate. First, there is an overall need for local analyses of priority topics to inform public policy, which include national and sub-national evidence to adequately strengthen responses and preparedness for climate change hazards and address relevant social vulnerabilities in South American countries. Second, research in health and climate is done in silos and the intersection is not clear in terms of responsibility and leadership; therefore, transdisciplinary research and action are key. Third, climate research, policies, and action need to be reflected in effective funding schemes, which until now are very limited. For adaptation and mitigation policies to be effective, they need a robust and long-term funding scheme. Finally, climate action is a big opportunity for healthier and more prosperous societies in South America, taking the advantage of strategic climate policies to face the challenges of climate change and tackle existing social inequities.