Counting The Cost 2022: A year of climate breakdown (December 2022)

New report: Top 10 climate disasters cost the world billions in 2022

Study identifies the year’s 10 costliest extreme events influenced by the climate crisis – each caused more than $3 billion in damage.

Report also examines 10 other extreme events that caused massive human and environmental damage, mostly in the poorest countries.

The floods that submerged parts of Pakistan in June displaced 7m people and caused more than $30 billion in estimated damages, with only $5.6 billion covered by insurance.

Hurricane Ian which struck the US and Cuba in September cost $100 billion

The summer heatwave and drought which ravaged the UK and Europe racked up $20 billion in losses.

Floods, cyclones and drought killed and displaced millions of people across the globe in places which have done little to cause the climate crisis.

Christian Aid calling on world leaders to decide how the loss and damage fund agreed at COP27 will be managed and get money flowing into it.

A new report by Christian Aid, Counting the cost 2022: a year of climate breakdown identifies 20 of the most destructive climate disasters of the year.

The ten most financially costly events all had an impact of $3 billion or more. Most of these estimates are based only on insured losses, meaning the true financial costs are likely to be even higher, while the human costs are often uncounted. Among them is Hurricane Ian which struck the US and Cuba in September costing $100 billion and displacing 40,000 people. The drought in Europe heatwave in Europe cost $20 billion while floods in Pakistan killed more than 1,700 people, displaced a further 7 million, and according to World Bank estimates caused $30 billion in economic damage. Due to the difficulty of obtaining insurance, only $5.6 billion of these losses were covered.

While the report focuses on financial costs, which are usually higher in richer countries because they have higher property values and can afford insurance, some of the most devastating extreme weather events in 2022 hit poorer nations, which have contributed little to causing the climate crisis and have the fewest buffers with which to withstand shocks.

In the report a second list of 10 climate disasters highlights some of these other climate events of 2022 which don’t make the list of insured losses but were just as damaging to communities or posed worrying future threats such as the Arctic and Antarctic heatwaves.

Christian Aid says these extreme events highlight the need for more urgent climate action. They underline the importance of the loss and damage fund recently agreed at COP27 to provide financial support to people in developing countries who have suffered huge losses due to a climate crisis they have not caused. The international development charity is calling on world leaders to decide how the fund is managed and get money flowing into it.

The extreme weather events caused severe human suffering from food insecurity, drought, mass displacements and loss of life. A devastating drought has affected more than 36 million people in East Africa, pushing many to the brink of famine. Whilst people in East Africa have been suffering from drought, in West Africa 1.3 million people were displaced by floods which killed more than 600 people in Nigeria, Cameroon, Mali and Niger.

Some of the disasters in 2022 hit rapidly, like February’s Storm Eunice, which set a new UK wind speed record of 122mph and Hurricane Fiona which struck the Caribbean and Canada in September and caused losses valued at more than $3 billion in just a few days. Other events took months to unfold, like the droughts in Brazil and China which lasted all year and cost $4 billion and $8.4 billion respectively.

No corner of the globe was spared from the costliest climate impacts in 2022 with all six populated continents represented in the top 10.

These impacts were also felt by some of the biggest fossil fuel polluters. Hurricane Ian in the USA, Hurricane Fiona in Canada, and floods in Eastern Australia in February costing $7.5 billion all struck countries with some of the biggest per person carbon emissions. Elsewhere floods in South Africa, and droughts and floods in China hit two of the world’s biggest coal producers.

Europe, battered by Strom Eunice and baked by the summer drought, is responsible for around 18% of human caused greenhouse gasses. It has pledged to go Net Zero by 2050 but according to Climate Action Tracker their current plans are deemed ‘insufficient’.

The Paris Agreement set the goal of keeping temperature rise to below 1.5°C compared to pre-industrial levels, yet the outcome from the COP27 climate summit in Egypt does not currently leave the world on track to meet this goal which is why much more urgent action is required.

Christian Aid CEO, Patrick Watt, said:

“Having ten separate climate disasters in the last year that each cost more than $3 billion points to the financial cost of inaction on the climate crisis. But behind the dollar figures lie millions of stories of human loss and suffering. Without major cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, this human and financial toll will only increase.

“The human cost of climate change is seen in the homes washed away by floods, loved ones killed by storms and livelihoods destroyed by drought. This year was a devastating one if you happened to live on the front line of the climate crisis.

“Some of these catastrophes hit with blinding speed, others unfolded – such as the terrible drought in East Africa – over many months.

“The UK did not escape the ravages of climate change in 2022 with both Storm Eunice and the summer heatwave taking their toll. These set both a new UK windspeed record and highest temperature record. This underlines the need for polices to accelerate the transition to net zero and the folly of the decision to open a new coal mine in Cumbria.”

Mr Shouro Dasgupta, Researcher at RFF-CMCC European Institute on Economics and the Environment and a Lecturer at Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, said:

“Both the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events are increasing due to climate change, resulting in unprecedented economic and social impacts. In 2022, floods in Pakistan and China, heatwaves in India and Pakistan, droughts in China and Europe, and several tropical cyclones in Asia and America resulted in significant economic damages, exacerbating the direct health impacts.

“One of the major impacts of climate change is on food security. Climate change is already undermining global food security, exacerbating the effects of the COVID-19, geopolitical, energy, and cost-of-living crises. The increasing frequency of heatwaves, due to climate change, resulted in an estimated 98 million more people suffering from moderate or severe food insecurity in 2020 compared to the 1981–2010 average, according to the recent Lancet Countdown 2022 report. Given the increased frequency and intensity of extreme events such as heatwaves and droughts in 2022, the impacts on food security are likely to be even higher.”

Hayley Fowler, Professor of Climate Change Impacts in the School of Engineering at Newcastle University, said:

“The number of extreme weather events we have seen across the globe in both 2021 and again in 2022 should be a wake-up call to the international community. The deadly heatwaves that have fuelled blazes and caused transport disruptions in Europe, the US and China and have caused massive flooding and landslides in other places have one thing in common: a peculiar shape in the jet stream dubbed “wavenumber 5”.

“In July and early August 2022, as well as summer 2021, a global pattern of five big waves circled the world, leading to simultaneous heatwaves across continents and coincident floods where low pressure centres occurred. This pattern, known as wavenumber 5, can persist for weeks, causing hot areas to stay hot for a long time, and connected wet areas to be very wet. Temperatures have already risen by about 1.2C since pre-industrial times due to human activity — warmer air can hold more moisture, making extreme rainfall events and flooding more likely, as well as hotter heatwaves.

“The jet stream itself also appears to be changing its behaviour over the long term and slowing down in summer, and becoming ‘wavier’ — which makes this blocking pattern more likely; with the rapid warming of the Arctic region the likely cause of this slowdown. Climate change is thus making extreme weather events more intense when they do occur, and more persistent. This makes them more expensive and impactful, and means that managing their effects on communities is a huge challenge.”

Mohamed Adow, Director of Nairobi-based energy and climate think tank, Power Shift Africa, said:

“It’s sobering to see the full extent of climate breakdown the world has suffered from in 2022. Whether it be cyclones and floods, or droughts and heatwaves it is clear that the crisis is getting worse. This report shows, in the starkest terms, why urgent climate action is so vital in 2023. We need to see the phasing out of fossil fuels, an acceleration of renewable energy and greater support for the vulnerable.

“Here in Africa we are seeing the suffering that climate change is causing to those that have done the least to cause it. 2023 needs to be the year we all wake up and start to put the world on the right track.”

Nushrat Chowdhury, Christian Aid Climate Justice Policy Advisor in Bangladesh, said:

“The creation of the loss and damage fund at the COP27 climate summit was a huge breakthrough for people living on the front lines of this crisis. This report shows just how badly it is needed and the urgency with which we need to see it up and running. The people flooded in Pakistan or victims of Cyclone Sitrang in my country of Bangladesh need this support to rebuild their lives.

“Many people in the global south dealing with these disasters cannot afford insurance to cover their losses and they often can’t rely on the state to act as a safety net. The fact they have done almost nothing to cause the climate emergency is why it is so unfair they are left to suffer without support. We must see that change in 2023.”

Source: Christian Aid

Deaths in Darfur in ‘a new wave of attacks’ by herders, RSF, and gunmen

Armed herders opened fire on a North Darfur government delegation in the countryside north-east of El Fasher. North Darfuris also protested against frequent armed robberies and attacks. Um Dafug in South Darfur witnessed tension after three people were killed by the infamous Rapid Support Forces (RSF) whilst East Darfur also witnessed the killing of a market guard.

Farmers told Radio Dabanga that a joint delegation of the Shepherds and Nomads Commission and the Committee for the Protection of the Agricultural Season was on its way to investigate reports about armed herdsmen releasing their cattle into farms in the areas of Seila Jadeedelseil, El Sahel, Um Meraheik, Azragfa, Gegojfo, and Fashar.

The delegation had to return to El Fasher and gain military protection before removing the livestock from the farms.

The Omda of the area of Seila, Ahmed Abdelgader, said that the cows destroyed crops in a number of farms. The Omda called on the North Darfur government to deal with the matter within a maximum period of 24 hours and threatened to take action against the herders if the government does not intervene.

A month ago, Radio Dabanga reported on the deteriorating security situation in North Darfur as herders destroyed the crops of displaced farmers by letting their cattle graze on their lands. The displaced farmers are also frequently subjected to rape and attacks.

In the past, there used to be clearly marked pasture tracks and traditional tribal procedures for herding practices and the compensation of lost crops for farmers, but this changed during the regime of Omar Al Bashir. The regime supported the ‘Arab’ herding tribes in the region, whilst looking down on non-Arab ‘Africans’, often sedentary farmers.

As a result, Darfur has a long history of strife between nomadic Arab herders and non-Arab African herders or sedentary farmers. Arab tribesmen were recruited by the previous regime of dictator Omar Al Bashir to join the Janjaweed militias. Al Bashir employed these Arab militias to repress a revolt over ethnic marginalisation in the region, mainly targeting non-Arab African farmers in what became known as the Darfur Genocide. Many of these farmers still live in camps for the displaced.

Saraf Omra protest

Saraf Omra in North Darfur witnessed relative calm on Sunday after protests against the killing of a man in an armed robbery near the town two days before. The town’s market partially re-opened.

On Saturday, a large number of people gathered in front of the Saraf Omra Rural Hospital and closed the town market. They demanded the arrest of the killers and the restoration of security in the area.

Participants in the protests carried banners denouncing the recurrent attacks and armed robberies, of which the last one claimed the life of Abdellatif Hasan on his way back from Birkat Seira to Saraf Omra on Friday.

RSF in Um Dafug

On Sunday, Um Dafug in South Darfur witnessed tension and the closure of the town’s market, following the killing of two people and the wounding of a woman by paramilitaries of the RSF on Saturday.

Speaking to Radio Dabanga, a listener said that an RSF force arrived in the town last week “to combat what it called ‘negative phenomena’”.

On Saturday, members of the force chased three armed men on a motorcycle and shot them. Two were killed instantly. The third one was detained. A woman passing by was hit by a stray bullet.

The source warned of the outbreak of protests against the violence, demanding the removal of the RSF force and the release of the detainee. He said that the force had now moved to the outskirts of the town.

Yesterday, Radio Dabanga reported that the death toll from attacks on villages in Beleil, also South Darfur, reached at least 15. The local government imposed a state of emergency and a curfew.

Sultan of the Daju tribe Jaafar Adam Ibrahim said that the victims hold the RSF responsible for the attacks and demand their removal from the area.

One of the leaders of the Daju, Saleh Eisa, described the attackers as “organised militiamen backed by government forces who arrived in four-wheel drive vehicles and on motorcycles, camels, and horses.”

East Darfur killing

Shop owners in the livestock market of Ed Daein, the capital of East Darfur, closed the market in protest against the killing of a market guard on Sunday. The man, aged 32, was shot dead on Saturday evening.

The Ed Daein Market Traders Association announced the closure of the entire market “until the state security committee has investigated the killing and previous attacks, enhanced security, and preserves the lives of the people”.

Traders told Radio Dabanga that the market repeatedly witnesses robberies, while the police and other security forces “are almost completely absent”.

On December 14, Radio Dabanga reported a number of attacks on civilians by armed men in Darfur. “A new wave of attacks on civilians in Darfur since mid-November 2021 highlights the urgent need for the UN to enhance its scrutiny of the restive region of Sudan,” said Human Rights Watch in a statement the day after.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Displacement Tracking Matrix – Regional Snapshot – Middle East & North Africa: Quarterly Report July 1 – September 30, 2022 – Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, Sudan, and Yemen

The Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) provides primary data and information on internal displacement and population movements – incountry and at regional and global levels. DTM’s work worldwide informs humanitarian, recovery, transition and development interventions by providing timely data and analysis to relevant actors including governments, United Nations partner agencies, donors and other stakeholders. DTM operates in contexts where conflict, natural disasters and complex emergency settings can cause short-term or protracted displacement, as well as in mixed migration contexts. In the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, there were 15.7 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) in 2021. This figure constitutes 26 per cent of the global population of IDPs, making MENA the region with the second highest concentration of IDPs worldwide (following the sub-Saharan Africa region). Most displacement in the MENA region (81%) has been triggered by armed conflict, in particular in Iraq, Libya, Syria and Yemen.

Source: International Organization for Migration

Schools to open later in parts of Sudan as temperatures drop

Sudan is witnessing temperatures much lower than usual as a cold weather front is moving across the country. Schools in North Kordofan will start later in the day as temperatures can drop to 10 degrees at night.

The Early Warning Unit of the Sudanese Meteorological Authority announced yesterday that it expects that the temperatures will continue to decrease in most parts of the country.

In its daily bulletin, the Early Warning Unit predicted cold and dusty winds in the north, middle, and west of the country and in parts of Red Sea state. It also expected light rain in the south-east of the Red Sea state.

As a cold front moves across Sudan this week, temperatures drop to 13 degrees Celsius in Khartoum at night and reach 28 degrees during the day. Because of the cold wind the temperature ‘feels’ at least two degrees less.

The Director General of the Ministry of Education in North Kordofan decided today to delay the start of the school day due to the cold weather.

From today onwards, the school day begins at 8:45. Lessons are shortened to 35 minutes.

In North Kordofan, temperatures can drop to 10 degrees at night and in the early morning. The temperatures only start to climb again in the morning hours.

The adaptation also includes cancellation of the “morning queue” in the school yard, during which students sing the national anthem and classes take turns in organising short quizzes and games.

Many modern Sudanese homes are designed and built in such a way as to help people cope with hot temperatures, not cold ones. Many buildings do not have glass windows to avoid solar gain and increase ventilation.

The classical way of building rooms in houses provides both coolness in the summer and warmth in the winter. Classic Sudanese houses consist of a compound with round ‘huts’ with thick walls of stones or rocks filled with clay or manure. These thick walls help to insulate homes.

Rains in Port Sudan

Activists reported that the death toll from the torrential rains in Port Sudan, capital of Red Sea state, had risen to eight last week.

In a press conference on Saturday, Head of the Eastern Sudan Civil Forces Association Taha Badawi called on the Port Sudan authorities to declare a state of emergency in the city and warned of an outbreak of epidemics due to the accumulation of water. He also pointed to the collapse of more than 27,000 homes and a number of schools.

He asked the government to prepare for the coming rains and conduct a complete re-evaluation of sanitation systems. Badawi warned of major errors in engineering planning and the construction of huge buildings in floodplains, which could exacerbate the negative consequences of rain.

Source: Radio Dabanga

Hemeti: Sudan police and security forces will be held accountable if they break the law

Gen Mohamed Hamdan ‘Hemeti’ Dagalo, Commander of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) and Vice-President of Sudan’s Sovereignty Council, said that any member of the police and other security forces will be held accountable if they violate the law during a speech in Khartoum on Saturday. Impunity and accountability have been contentious issues in negotiations between civilians and the military.

During a ceremony of the police forces in the Friendship Hall, he said that “there is nothing too big for the law and that any transgression is met with decisiveness,” and referred to the “many trials of members of the police or other regular forces, because of their transgression of the law”.

The RSF commander announced the formation of “a committee of competent bodies to investigate all crimes during the revolution”. He added that “a number of complaints have already been submitted to the courts”.

Hemeti affirmed that “the police will always remain neutral, regardless of any political situation”.

‘The police will always remain neutral, regardless of any political situation’

Impunity

The remarks come at a time when questions around transitional justice, accountability, and possible immunity from prosecution are being discussed in negotiations for the Final Agreement between civilian parties and Sudan’s military apparatus.

In recent negotiations with civilian parties, the military commanders have been reportedly requesting immunity from legal prosecutions for crimes committed since the 2019 military coup, which included the June 3 Massacre and other violent crackdowns on protesters.

Impunity and the lack of accountability of military forces and affiliates of the former regime have been a point of contention for years. It is common for members of the armed forces to commit crimes and never face prosecution, or for detainees to be tortured or killed in custody without ever seeing any accountability.

The Commander-in-Chief of the Sudan Armed Forces (SAF), the official military, is currently also Chairman of Sudan’s main governing body, the Sovereignty Council, and therefore the official head of state whilst Hemeti is Vice Chairman.

The two leaders took power in a military coup last year.

Source: Radio Dabanga