In
mankind’s eagerness to ‘progress’ and
‘develop’ sight has been lost of the finite and delicate nature of planet Earth
and of humanity’s place in it. As a
consequence the global climate has become unbalanced, leading to an increasing
risk of floods, droughts and severe storms the world over. In its 4th Assessment Report, the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
projects that rising global temperature will cause increasing drought in
mid-latitudes and semi-arid latitudes, increased water stress in many parts of
the world, increased damage from storms, and coastal flooding affecting
millions more people each year.
The
commitment by G8 nations at the recently held summit in Rome to reducing
greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050 suggests that there is some serious
concern about the effects of climate change such that nations are seriously
looking at changing the way society meets its energy needs.
Whilst
the target is noteworthy, there are still a few outstanding issues that are yet
to be resolved. For example, in
attempting to deal with developing the target, there has been no definite
discussion on how this can be achieved. In
addition to this there are worries about the accountability aspect of such a
long time frame.
The
political ramifications also have wide ranging consequences with many
developing countries such as India
and China
unwilling to compromise their economic growth at the insistence of the Western
governments. So the long and short end of the discussion is
that if the West wants an energy revolution from the developing world in order
to combat climate change, it might have to fund it.
Environmental
campaigners are also concerned that many of the poorest nations who are the
direct victims of climate change have not been involved in the current talks. The impacts of climate change are expected to affect disproportionately
developing countries and the poor persons within all countries, thereby exacerbating
inequities in health status and access to adequate food, clean water and other
resources. There are predictions that by 2080 an extra 600 million people worldwide could be affected by malnutrition. An
extra 400 million people could be exposed to malaria. And an extra 1.8 billion
people could be living without enough water.
It is expected that the amount that must be invested in order to avoid
the worst effects of climate change is about 1% of the global GDP per annum.
Countries such as Bangladesh , Maldives
and Sudan
are very vulnerable and poverty is expected to increase and development to into
reverse. Bangladesh in particular is
vulnerable due to its low lying land and
seeing increasing effects of climate change with the various cyclones and flash
floods that have plagued it over the last couple of years. One cant forget Cyclone Sidr which hit Bangladesh in
2007 and caused so much death and destruction.
Other cyclones have hit India
and Myanmar
in the past two years, the veracity being unprecedented. Maldives is suffering from
increasing sea water levels.
Whilst these are
responses to immediate problems, they are analgous to treating the wound with a
bandage. What is needed for effective
long term sustainable development is to tackle climate change.
Climate change increases disaster risk in a number of ways. It changes the magnitude and frequency of extreme events6 (meaning that coping
and response mechanisms and economic planning for disasters based on past vulnerabilities may no longer suffice) It changes average climatic conditions and climate variability, affecting underlying risk factors, and it generates new threats, which a region may have no experience in dealing with.
If climate change adaptation
policies and measures are to be efficient and effective they must build on and expand existing disaster risk
reduction efforts And if disaster risk reduction approaches are
to be sustainable they must account for the
impact of climate change.
Faith Based Organisations, especially those inspired by Islam, can use the basis of their origins to develop
an effective response. For instance by using Islamic teachings to offer an opportunity to
understand the natural order to define human responsibility. In particular the
concept of khalifah – vicegerents or representatives of God on earth and
mizan – balance, can be used to reignite the
call to responsibility for the earth. The current environmental crisis
is the result of long neglect on the part of humanity. The previous notion that
human beings can behave with an idea of unlimited power towards nature is now
questioned. Thus these two concepts can
be used to instill a move towards climate change adoption.
Actions
to address climate change falls under two broad themes: preventing the worst extremes of it happening, and
preparing for the inevitable effects that are already too late to
prevent. It is important that both of
these are considered together.
There
is a need to think seriously about the effects of climate change and more
importantly about what can be done to address it. The responsibility is collective and not just dependent on government or Non
Governmental Organisations. It is the
responsibility of all individuals to rise above their individuality and work
towards the collective humanity. There
is no other greater responsibility than ensuring that climate change does not
doom the world.
Amjad Saleem
References:
- DFID ‘Degrees of
Separation – Climate Change: Shared Challenges; Shared Opportunities’,
2008
- Tearfund, ‘Linking
Climate Change adaptation and disaster risk reduction’ , July 2008
- www.bbc.co.uk
- AMAN, ‘Consultation on
Islamic Responses to Climate Change, October 2008