The main purpose of this ongoing blog is to track planetary extreme, or record temperatures related to climate change. Any reports I see of ETs will be listed below the main topic of the day. I’ll refer to extreme or record temperatures as ETs (not extraterrestrials).😉
Main Topic: 2023’s Costliest Weather Disasters Reveal ‘Double Inequality’ of Climate Crisis
Dear Diary. During 2023 the world lurched upwards toward +1.5°C above preindustrial conditions for global averages due to El Niño and other factors, surprisingly more than what was expected from many experts. Due to this added warmth, billion-dollar weather disasters become more common relative to the last few years. These affected areas of the world that can least afford the cost of the climate crisis.
For today’s main topic, here are details via Common Dreams about 2023’s billion-dollar disasters, a trend revealing why poor countries are getting the shaft more than countries able to recover from effects from climate change.
2023’s Costliest Weather Disasters Reveal ‘Double Inequality’ of Climate Crisis (commondreams.org)
People look at a damaged road in Blantyre, Malawi, on March 14, 2023. (Photo: Joseph Mizere/Xinhua via Getty Images)
2023’s Costliest Weather Disasters Reveal ‘Double Inequality’ of Climate Crisis
“There is a global postcode lottery that is stacked against the poor,” Christian Aid’s chief executive said on the publication of the charity’s annual list of the year’s costliest climate-driven disasters.
Dec 27, 2023
Christian Aid’s annual list of the 20 costliest climate crisis-driven disasters of 2023, published Wednesday, reveals a “double injustice,” as populations that have emitted relatively little greenhouse gas disproportionately suffer the impacts of extreme weather events ranging from floods to storms to wildfires.
While the disasters on the list impacted low-, medium-, and high-income countries, the U.K.-based charity observed that people in low-income nations have fewer resources to recover.
“When it comes to the climate crisis, there is a global postcode lottery that is stacked against the poor,” Christian Aid chief executive Patrick Watt said in a statement. “In poorer countries, people are often less prepared for climate-related disasters and have fewer resources with which to bounce back. The upshot is that more people die, and recovery is slower and more unequal.”
Floods, cyclones & droughts killed and displaced millions in places which have done little to cause the #ClimateCrisis.
— Christian Aid (@christian_aid) December 27, 2023
🚨 Analysis of 2023's top 20 costliest climate disasters reveals a 'global postcode lottery stacked against the poor'.
Find out more: https://t.co/AQjwCsmpP4 pic.twitter.com/ZwfeKTOPL2
The disasters on the list reflect an accelerating climate emergency, as 2023 is set to be the hottest year both on the official record and in 125,000 years of human history.
“The effects of climate change are increasingly obvious, not least in the increasing frequency and severity of climate related disasters,” Watt wrote in the report foreword. “Floods, storms, heatwaves, and droughts are all becoming more intense, and climate attribution science is becoming clearer that climate change is causing these more intense disasters.”
The report focuses on disasters whose increased frequency or intensity have been linked to the burning of fossil fuels, excluding events like earthquakes. It draws primarily on the EM-DAT database of international disasters, supplementing with data from individual countries, insurers, and the United Nations. It then determines their per capita cost by dividing total damages by the impacted population.
“The worst negative impact of Cyclone Freddy that I shall never forget in my entire life is the destruction of the only house that we struggled to construct.”
“This method offers a more individualized perspective of the disaster’s impact, highlighting the financial strain on the average citizen rather than just the aggregate economic toll,” the report authors explained.
The costliest climate disaster of 2023 was the wildfire that devastated Maui from August 8 to 11. The report found that the fires had a per capita cost of $4,161 for the people of Hawaii. While Hawaii is part of the U.S., a wealthy country, other commenters have noted that the fire reflected the legacy of the colonialism inflicted on Indigenous Hawaiians and land-use changes that favored first agricultural plantations and then tourism over maintaining a healthy ecosystem. Locals and climate justice advocates voiced concerns that the affected area would be rebuilt in the interests of wealthy developers rather than surviving residents.
Other headline-making disasters on the list included the flooding that inundated Libya in September and Cyclone Freddy in Malawi, which was the second deadliest cyclone in Africa since 2000.
Christian Aid’s full list of the 20 costliest disasters of 2023 and their per capital price tag is as follows:
- Hawaii, U.S., wildfire: $4,161 per person
- Guam, storm: $1,455 per person
- Vanuatu, storm: $947 per person
- New Zealand, storm: $468 per person
- New Zealand, flood: $371 per person
- Italy, flood: $164 per person
- Libya, flood: $105 per person
- Peru, flood: $66 per person
- Spain, drought: $50 per person
- Myanmar, storm: $41 per person
- Chile, flood: $39 per person
- Haiti, flood: $36 per person
- Mexico, storm: $35 per person
- Chile, wildfire: $30 per person
- U.S., storm: $25 per person
- China, flood: $23 per person
- Peru, storm: $20 per person
- Malawi, storm: $17 per person
- U.S., storm: $16 per person
- Peru, flood: $9 per person
The report authors pointed out that per capita costs tend to be higher in wealthier countries that have higher costs of living and more insurance data to inform figures. This does not always reflect the relative impact of a disaster on a population. For example, a full recovery from Storm Freddy in Malawi is estimated to cost $680 million.
“Given the scale of the disaster, and the huge number of people affected, this may seem like a relatively low amount,” the report authors noted, “but since the total of economy of Malawi is $13 billion, it represents 5%, a much higher proportion than in most other disasters on our list.”
The per-person cost of that full recovery comes out to $33, which seems small by U.S. standards but amounts to more than 5% of the average annual income of $500 in Malawi.
“The worst negative impact of Cyclone Freddy that I shall never forget in my entire life is the destruction of the only house that we struggled to construct,” 69-year-old widow and storm survivor Mofolo Chikaonda told Christian Aid.
Watt wrote in the foreword that “the fact that poorer countries and communities contribute little to global heating makes climate-related disasters a double inequality. This is an injustice that a growing number of poorer countries and civil society campaigners have rightly challenged.”
The charity made several recommendations for the international community to prepare for and address climate disasters in a just manner.
“Governments urgently need to take further action at home and internationally to cut emissions and adapt to the effects of climate change,” Watt said. “And where the impacts go beyond what people can adapt to, the loss and damage fund must be resourced to compensate the poorest countries for the effects of a crisis that isn’t of their making.”
A loss and damage fund to help poorer nations pay for the inevitable impacts of the climate crisis was agreed to at the 27th annual U.N. Climate Change Conference (COP27) in 2022 and had its details finalized at this year’s COP28 in Dubai.
“Loss and damage costs are in the hundreds of billions of dollars annually in developing countries alone,” Nushrat Chowdhury, Christian Aid’s climate justice policy adviser in Bangladesh, said in a statement. “Wealthy nations must commit the new and additional money required to ensure the loss and damage fund agreed at COP28 can be quickly get help to those that need it most.”
Christian Aid said that countries should agree on a New Collective Quantified Goal to fully fund climate mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage; make sure poorer nations can quickly access the new loss and damage fund as it becomes operational in 2024; make vulnerable communities more resilient by investing in solutions like agroecology; increase funding for early warning and response systems; measure the impacts of disasters and share their findings; and establish social services at home to assist disaster victims while providing poorer nations with the debt relief, funding, and tax-rule reform they need so they can afford to help their own populations.
Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.
Olivia Rosane is a staff writer for Common Dreams.
Christian AidClimate JusticeCop28Extreme WeatherFloodsLibyaLoss And Damage FundMalawiMaui FiresStorm FreddyWildfiresClimate Emergency
FROM YOUR SITE ARTICLES
- According To NYT, ‘Relentless Flooding’ In Midwest Just Happens ›
- Nature Offers Solutions To Water Woes And Flood Risks ›
- NOAA Finds Carbon Concentrations Highest In 800,000 Years As Sea Level Rise Hits Record ›
- This Year’s Top 10 Global Climate Disasters Each Cost Over $3 Billion ›
- A Record 15 Billion-Dollar Disasters Have Hit US So Far This Year: NOAA ›
- US Has Already Seen 7 Different Billion-Dollar Weather Disasters This Year: NOAA ›
Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:
Mild in BC? Hum, look at Northern Canada… 🥵
— Thierry Goose (@ThierryGooseBC) December 28, 2023
5.3°C Yohin, NT
2.3°C Uranium City, SK
1.1°C Key Lake, SK
0.3°C Lynn Lake, MB
-0.1°C Yellowknife, NT
-0.4°C Collins Bay, SK & Tadoule Lake, MB
These are just a few examples but the crazy positive anomalies extend allover Canada. 🙃 pic.twitter.com/8xiopiTJhX
2023 has been a year like none before,it started with thousands of records in Europe on 1 January and it will end on 31 December with widespread records.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 27, 2023
Hottest spot will be NW Australia which can reach 49C+ on the last day of the year.
A record year from the start to the end. pic.twitter.com/s8xuOI0a0T
Another very hot day in CHILE 🇨🇱.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 27, 2023
This time in the Central Regions of Bernardo O Higgins;Maule,Ñuble,Biobio and Araucania.
Temperatures were at record levels for December in some areas.
39.5C Renaico
39.2C Mulchen
38.0C Chillan https://t.co/ABB4Mpk92o
December should see some cool weather in VENEZUELA, but not this year.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 27, 2023
The scorching with temperatures up to 38C is persisting after the hottest November on record.
South America is seeing records allover these days from Colombia to Chile but specially in Brazil. https://t.co/39tlZGVL0J
Record heat in West Papua (Irian Jaya) ,Indonesia:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 27, 2023
Yesterday the town of Tenah Merah rose to 37.9C, which is the highest temperature ever recorded in West Papua climatic history (previous 37.1 same location 22 Oct 2015).
Also,Monthly record in Borneo with 36.1C at Kalimaru. pic.twitter.com/vCpXoDRBNC
Relentless record heat allover the Gulf of Guinea in Africa.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 27, 2023
Yesterday the Ivorian city of Abidjan rose to 35.4C, its hottest December day on record, after a Tmin of 27.0C (close to record).
All the countries in the area have been beating records for weeks. pic.twitter.com/HGVQS7TcYO
Unstoppable record heat also in the Indian Ocean:
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) December 27, 2023
The island of Glorieuses, also part of the French Southern Territories, today rose to 33.9C, tying its hottest December day on record. https://t.co/cWoyRkJlsK
The sequence of temperatures below -40 °C in the heart of summer on the Antarctic Plateau is starting to be extraordinary. On December 26, the minimum reached -41.1 °C at Vostok and -41.1 °C at Concordia. No precedent in the 21st century (the 20th in the previous tweet is wrong) https://t.co/AFHFgozdjf
— Stefano Di Battista (@pinturicchio_60) December 27, 2023
#Christmas 2023 was one of the greenest ever observed in #Canada.
— Thierry Goose (@ThierryGooseBC) December 26, 2023
0 cm ➡️ Charlottetown, Edmonton, Halifax, Moncton, Montreal, Regina, Saskatoon, Thunder Bay, Toronto, Vancouver, Victoria
1 cm ➡️ Calgary, Ottawa
2 cm ➡️ Winnipeg
3 cm ➡️ Fredericton, Quebec City
8 cm ➡️ St. John's pic.twitter.com/hIZLmoNylh
Here is More Climate and News from Wednesday:
(As usual, this will be a fluid post in which more information gets added during the day as it crosses my radar, crediting all who have put it on-line. Items will be archived on this site for posterity. In most instances click on the pictures of each tweet to see each article. The most noteworthy items will be listed first.)
2023 is almost over. With the remaining days being in the forecast, the final global temperature picture emerges. Remarkable new record just below the 1.5°C threshold (in this dataset). December was the warmest on record as well (~0.2°C above 2015). #ClimateProblem #ActNow pic.twitter.com/uwlBCH4ffE
— khaustein.bsky.social 🌍 (@khaustein) December 27, 2023
Physicists Warn Earth Could Feasibly Descend Into Chaos in which there is no return to a stable #climate with completely unpredictable and extreme seasonal fluctuations and weather events – the signs of which are already manifesting themselves https://t.co/be0keAiAhk
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) December 27, 2023
Looking at the 2023 data through Dec 21st from ERA 5 and estimates for Dec 22 through Dec 26th, the last 5 days of 2023 would need to average +2.1°C to NOT have 2023 be the warmest year on record. Since 1940, every year has been at least 11.4°C the last 5 days of the year. pic.twitter.com/dQ087FfDM0
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) December 27, 2023
Great piece by @JakeTapper calling out the oil and gas industry for its climate lies: "We know that the oil and gas industry is as credible in their climate skepticism as the tobacco industry was with their skepticism of the risks of lung cancer." https://t.co/G0jDArMsbG @CNNSOTU
— Rocky Kistner (@therockyfiles) December 26, 2023
This essay hasn't had enough reads.
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) December 26, 2023
"I know why the media stopped its coverage of methane. It’s not sexy. It’s not bloody. It’s not funny. And it’s hopeless."https://t.co/4DSImvYmXG
WTF Happened to the Methane Monster?
Your 'moment of doom' for Dec. 27, 2023 ~ UFB!
— Prof. Eliot Jacobson (@EliotJacobson) December 27, 2023
"melting permafrost will leave the soil easier to drill, while receding ice will make previously inaccessible areas of the Arctic shelf ripe for the exploitation of oil, gas, rare earths and precious metals."https://t.co/QphNr8UgpR
This is the correct take on Sudden Stratospheric warmings. They’re natural and broken jet posts should not claim climate change is causing the SSW and broken jet. With that said, research is ongoing on the impact of CC on SSW. This study finds some impact https://t.co/fSNTJVxx7T. https://t.co/VETcemGJRI
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) December 27, 2023
"Are sudden stratospheric warmings preceded by anomalous tropospheric wave activity?" — @AlvaroDLaCamara et al., 2019 https://t.co/nWnoNkA3r7
— Dr Simon Lee (@SimonLeeWx) December 27, 2023
Note how in this GFS forecast, anomalous upward wave activity (eddy heat flux) exists only in the stratosphere. 🧵 pic.twitter.com/hef7ZCTbvx
100 years of November temperature anomalies over land areas through this year (a new record)…
— Zack Labe (@ZLabe) December 27, 2023
Data from https://t.co/8pB26Jcqph pic.twitter.com/YuzG3RClZj
Paying for the damage it has caused would bankrupt this industry, which would at least keep it from expanding! https://t.co/BPfuR5qCqh
— Bill McKibben (@billmckibben) December 27, 2023
Yep…..Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for December 27, 2023 pic.twitter.com/K7oW4c0E8J
— Dr. Marshall Shepherd (my record is my blue check) (@DrShepherd2013) December 27, 2023
Today’s News on Sustainable Energy, Traditional Polluting Energy from Fossil Fuel, and the Green Revolution:
Strong wind generation and low demand during the holiday period sends electricity prices below zero in #Germany#RenewableEnergy https://t.co/t43i4KkSpc via @climate
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 27, 2023
BBC News – Sheffield City Council emissions only cut by 3% since 2019
— Brian McHugh 🌏🏳️🌈 (@BrianMcHugh2011) December 26, 2023
A council has only reduced emissions by 3% since declaring a "climate emergency" over four years ago, a report has revealed.
ICYMI
This is not the level of #ClimateAction we needhttps://t.co/5x4ZJKukIH
#Uruguay’s green power revolution: rapid shift to #WindWaterSolar shows the world how it’s done
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 27, 2023
"Stung by the 2008 oil price spike, Uruguay now produces up to 98% of its electricity from #RenewableEnergy"#EnergyTransition@mzjacobson @ChristianOnRE
https://t.co/OGOvZVT2KH
When the Intercontinental Terminals Company sought a permit to expand its tank farm and terminal on the Houston Ship Channel in 2014, a reviewer with Texas’ environmental regulator expressed a long list of concerns. But ITC got its permit the next year.https://t.co/PvBLAhdruq
— Inside Climate News (@insideclimate) December 27, 2023
In Manhattan, a new waterside park will function as a berm, keeping floodwaters from city streets.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) December 27, 2023
The park is part of a massive, Dutch-inspired flood control project aimed at protecting the city against rising seas.https://t.co/xtmHyGf23b
Wind, #Solar & Batteries Grow Despite Economic Challenges
— Prof. Peter Strachan (@ProfStrachan) December 27, 2023
"Led by new solar power, the world added #RenewableEnergy at breakneck speed in 2023, a trend that if amplified will help Earth turn away from #FossilFuels & prevent severe warming & its effects"
https://t.co/0lKLuiIcQ1
In an unprecedented step to preserve and maintain the most carbon-rich elements of U.S. forests in an era of climate change, President Joe Biden’s administration last week proposed to end commercially driven logging of old-growth trees in National Forests. https://t.co/ZcetD71rhU
— Inside Climate News (@insideclimate) December 27, 2023
Expanding fossil fuels is incompatible with a stable climate, but Georgia Power hasn't gotten the memo. On Oct. 27, 2023, they filed a surprise IRP asking for 6,600 MWs of new energy, some 1,650% more than it forecast in January 2022. https://t.co/JiMs5oWc3h
— Patty Durand (@PattyforGaPSC) December 27, 2023
South Korea is looking to quadruple solar power from factory rooftops and parking lots: https://t.co/UQ4rbzvNmD
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 28, 2023
Shouldn't every roof and parking lot get a solar upgrade?
We have the solutions. #ActOnClimate #climate #renewables pic.twitter.com/lC7WQsNXev
More from the Weather Department:
Severe storms with large hail and damaging winds swept through Australia over the Christmas holiday, killing at least 10 people. pic.twitter.com/Nc8rBFBaTK
— AccuWeather (@accuweather) December 27, 2023
The non-winter of winter 2023/24 of fog, rain but no #snow continues for now. This is not a strong signal but finally at least some glimmers of hope for the snow-starved among us in the Northeastern US for the second week of January. In a normal winter I wouldn't even share this. pic.twitter.com/jn3RRBLCYL
— Judah Cohen (@judah47) December 27, 2023
WATCH: Intense wind and snow battered parts of Nebraska yesterday, prompting blizzard warnings. pic.twitter.com/CnAlQ1eQyd
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) December 27, 2023
How does ensemble spread in the lower stratospheric forecast (100 hPa 60°N zonal winds) in the extended GEFS relate to spread in MSLP?
— Dr Simon Lee (@SimonLeeWx) December 27, 2023
A particularly large negative NAO-type relationship, consistent with physical expectation, emerges in forecast week 3 (w/c Jan 9th) pic.twitter.com/y3eVK8UoLq
Wowza, look at that occlusion (purple)! What a heckin chonker!#uswx pic.twitter.com/HVrKXBMe6W
— NWS Atlanta (@NWSAtlanta) December 27, 2023
More on the Environment and Nature:
Great reporting on powerful CA farmers who tap groundwater, boosting land subsidence and poisoned water supplies. “The people that are taking the water are very powerful…I was told that I better get a bodyguard.”https://t.co/GMt7EarWRJ @susrust @jvgarrison @byianjames
— Rocky Kistner (@therockyfiles) December 27, 2023
Remarkably, a fairly broad region in & near #Tulare Basin has experienced *3-5+ * feet of ground subsidence (i.e., "sinking") in less than 10 yrs. Massive groundwater pumping & subsequent overdraft during record-breaking droughts during that period are primary culprit.#CAwater https://t.co/8jvb5sUgw9
— Dr. Daniel Swain (@Weather_West) December 27, 2023
Illegal mining on rise again in Amazon, says Yanomami leader
— GO GREEN (@ECOWARRIORSS) December 27, 2023
Heavily armed mining gangs linked to organised crime had never left, Kopenawa said, urging Lula to intensify operations.https://t.co/748x0v8YbC
Scientists have only begun to uncover the extent of pollution from tires.
— Yale Environment 360 (@YaleE360) December 26, 2023
Research shows that particulate pollution from tires and brakes far exceeds pollution from tailpipes. Tires also release more volatile organic compounds.https://t.co/vxGEi9POH8
This is what a whale/dolphin play date looks like.
— Mike Hudema (@MikeHudema) December 27, 2023
Nature is amazing. Protect it.#ActOnClimate #climate #biodiversity #NatureNeedsHalf #SDGS pic.twitter.com/OamvLiqYE6
More on Other Science and the Beauty of Earth and this Universe:
'History buffs will dig these 5 science stories from 2023'https://t.co/AnvkT9Y9Ux pic.twitter.com/sIe50SGXQ5
— Jake Reyna (@iJakeReyna) December 27, 2023
Night thoughts:
— Green is a mission (@Greenisamissio1) December 27, 2023
Here is a "machine" that removes CO2 from the atmosphere, regulates groundwater, protects the soil, cleans the air of dirt, produces oxygen, builds itself, is cheap and also delights us with its splendor and beauty.
It is called 👇🌳🌲tree 🌲🌳👇 pic.twitter.com/Fbc7HLUzc4