What the new IPCC report says climate change could — and is — costing Canadians
Largest costs arise out of wildfires, floods and droughts
Nicole Mortillaro · CBC News · Posted:
Mar 05, 2022 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: March 5
The
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released a report on Monday on the
impacts, adaptation and vulnerability humans face with rising temperatures.
It may be difficult
to get through all the facts and figures on yet another tome — it's more than
3,500 pages. But this report, much different than its predecessors,
focuses on the human toll of climate change and how we may adapt.
Or, as UN
Secretary-General António Guterres called it: "an atlas of human suffering
and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership."
Among all the
numbers, the report's message is clear: climate change is already taking its
toll on humanity, at a grave cost. Some of that's hard put a dollar figure on,
but the concrete costs are already mounting.
And it could
be much worse, depending on the trajectory we take.
Wildfires
It's no big
surprise following the tragic fires that ravaged B.C. last summer that the new
report says wildfires are the top climate change risk facing Canada, causing a
heavy financial strain. The 2016 wildfire in Fort McMurray, Alta., caused $3
billion in insured damages alone. And in 2017, fire suppression cost the
province $500 million.
What's worse is that the report suggests that places that only experience fire every 400 years will experience them as often as once every 50 years.
Burnt homes and vehicles in Lytton, B.C., nearly eight months after a wildfire swept through the village on June 30, 2021. (Gian Paolo Mendoza/CBC) |
"We're kind of
used to these events being sort of discrete events: there was a flood last year
or there was a forest fire three years ago, kind of thing. Now the risk that's
starting to emerge is that these events start to happen closer together, that
they're more severe when they do occur," said Robert McLeman,
environmental studies professor at Wilfrid Laurier University and coordinating
lead author on the IPCC report's chapter on health, well-being and the changing
structure of communities.
"It amplifies
the risks to people's physical well-being, mental health and well-being. And it
increases the risk of displacement."
The report further
states that fires, combined with pests and other factors, could result in the
loss of $459 billion in forestry by 2080, with the biggest losses in British
Columbia, Saskatchewan and the Northwest Territories.
It's also important
to consider the financial cost of people being displaced by more frequent and
intense wildfires.
How quickly humans
act to reduce emissions changes the forecast of how bad things will get.
Under a
forecasted scenario with stringent emissions cuts, known as RCP2.6, the
annual fire suppression cost could rise to $1 billion by the end of the
century, which would be a 60 per cent increase relative to 1980–2009. In a
worst-case scenario, called RCP8.5, that cost could rise to $1.9 billion, which
would be a 119 per cent increase.
Cities
Wildfires may not
be top of mind for the more than 80 per cent of Canadians who live in a city,
but city-dwellers are facing their own challenges.
The report found
that North American cities are already facing challenges from a warming planet,
including the severity and frequency of "climate-induced hazards" and
extreme events, such as severe storms.
These storms are
costing Canadians due to infrastructure damage, such as floods in cities like
Calgary and Toronto. According to the IPCC, flooding accounts for 40 per cent
of weather-related disasters since 1970, the costliest being the 2013 Calgary
flood which cost $1.8 billion in insurance losses and an additional $6 billion
in uninsured costs. The report did not include the fires and floods from
2021.In June 2013, a massive storm dumped record amounts of rain on southern Alberta, leading to devastating flooding in Calgary and nearby communities. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)
"Cities are
very complex, so their vulnerabilities are complex," said Luna Khirfan, an
associate professor at the University of Waterloo, who was involved in the IPCC
report's chapter concerning cities. "You have the direct vulnerabilities
to climate hazards, to climate-related risks like flooding, urban heat islands.
Coastal cities face storm surge, beach erosion. So these physical risks are
compounded in cities because you have a concentration of human lives and
livelihoods. So to protect the economy, to protect human lives, we need to act
and we need to act now."
Food production
Farmers have always
faced the challenges of weather, but climate change brings new extremes and
unpredictability. The report states that high temperatures along with extreme
weather events linked to climate change — such as droughts, floods and heat
waves — will "increasingly limit production in agriculture"
including aquaculture and fisheries.
Maize production
could fall by four per cent in a high-emission scenario or less than one per
cent under rapid emissions cuts. And, with increasing warming, pests and
diseases are expected to worsen. By 2050, parts of British Columbia, Alberta,
Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Yukon and the Northwest Territories will
experience water scarcity in the growing season.
For those in Nova
Scotia, climate change has already reduced kelp by 85 to 99 per cent. Kelp
serves as a habitat for fish off the coast of the province. Fishing boats, loaded with traps, head from port in West Dover, N.S. The new report from the IPCC says that fisheries will be affected by warming ocean waters. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)
Ocean acidity will affect fisheries as some shellfish
struggle to make their shells. And the report says that, if
emissions are high, shellfish production could drop by 51 per cent with the
biggest losses in British Columbia and Quebec, and shellfish and lobster by 42
to 54 per cent.
It's unclear how
all these rapid changes will affect prices at the grocery store.
The good news is
those losses could be cut in half if emissions are cut rapidly, the IPCC said.
Indigenous health
When it comes to
food, Indigenous people face some of the biggest challenges.
Due to the changes
to delicate ecosystems, which includes our oceans, the study said that
Indigenous groups — in particular those on the West Coast — will have
"less access to traditionally harvested seafood," which will have consequences
for their health. Even if they try to replace seafood with non-traditional
food, they will suffer from nutrient loss.
And because they
will rely more on purchasing food, it raises their costs and could contribute
to food insecurity along with impacts on their health in regions that are
already suffering. Already, food prices are disproportionately high in the
North.
"The reality
is that most Canadians, regardless of where they live, have felt the impacts of
the climate crisis," said Julia Levin, senior climate and energy program
manager at Environmental Defence, a Canadian environmental advocacy
organization. "That's been felt most most by communities in the
North, whose homes are literally falling to the to the sea, and where food
security is already diminishing."
Humanity will
continue feeling the effects of a changing climate, though by just how
much depends on how we move forward, the report said. It's
something they have continued to echo in every report.
Levin said
Canadians have the ability to make a difference.
"The decisions
we make today will determine that future outcome," Levin said. "But I
think what we really have to remember is that we have all the solutions, we
know exactly what we need to do. The only thing missing is that political will.
And we, as a population, need to be holding our decision-makers at all levels
of government accountable for doing what needs to be done."
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