Publication | Open Access
‘Will the Paris Agreement protect us from hydro-meteorological extremes?’
12
Citations
42
References
2020
Year
Climate EthicsEngineeringClimate PolicyClimate Change RegulationEarth ScienceClimate ImpactPublic HealthGlobal Population ExposureClimate LawClimate ChangeMeteorologyPopulation ExposureClimate HazardsGeographyClimate Change VulnerabilityWeather DisasterParis AgreementWeather ModificationGlobal HealthClimate RiskCompound RiskClimate Disaster
Abstract Multi-hazard assessment is needed to understand compound risk. Yet, modelling of multiple climate hazards has been limitedly applied at the global scale to date. Here we provide a first comprehensive assessment of global population exposure to hydro-meteorological extremes—floods, drought and heatwaves—under different temperature increase targets. This study shows how limiting temperature increase to 1.5 and 2 °C, as for the goals of the Paris Agreement, could substantially decrease the share of global population exposed compared to a 3 °C scenario. In a 2 °C world, population exposure would drop by more than 50%, in Africa, Asia and the Americas, and by about 40% in Europe and Oceania. A 1.5 °C stabilization would further reduce exposure of about an additional 10% to 30% across the globe. As the Parties of the Paris Agreement are expected to communicate new or updated nationally determined contributions by 2020, our results powerfully indicate the benefits of ratcheting up both mitigation and adaptation ambition.
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