Global Climate Risk Index Shows Disastrous Impacts of Climate Change

The Global Climate Risk Index by the environmental think tank Germanwatch shows that globally in the past 20 years, nearly 500,000 fatalities were directly linked to more than 12,000 extreme weather events. This amounted to approximately $3.54 trillion in economic damages.

The Climate Risk Index shows that climate change has disastrous impacts especially for poor countries, but also causes increasingly severe damages in industrialized countries like Japan or Germany.

–David Eckstein, Germanwatch
Climate Risk Index 2020, Table 2018 - 10 most affected countries
Climate Risk Index 2020, table 2018
(C) www.germanwatch.org/en/cri

Impact Especially Tough on Poor Countries

During 1999 to 2018, poor countries faced much higher impacts. Seven of the ten countries most affected are developing countries with low or lower middle income per capita. Puerto Rico, Myanmar, and Haiti were most affected. The Philippines were hit by the most powerful typhoon recorded worldwide in 2018.

Countries like Haiti, Philippines and Pakistan are repeatedly hit by extreme weather events and have no time to fully recover. That underlines the importance of reliable financial support mechanisms for poor countries like these not only in climate change adaptation, but also for dealing with climate-induced loss and damage.

–David Eckstein, Germanwatch

Those who are least responsible for the problem, are the ones who are suffering the most. This is unacceptable.

–Renato Redentor Constantino, Executive Director, Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities (Philippines)

Industrialized Countries Also Impacted

Among industrialized countries, in 2018, Japan and Germany were hit hardest by heat-waves and severe drought.

Heat Waves

Science confirms the link between climate change and the frequency and severity of extreme heat.

Heat waves were one major cause of damage in 2018. Germany, Japan, and India suffered from extended periods of heat. Europe is now up to 100 times more likely than a century ago to experience extreme heat spells. The African continent heatwaves may be under-represented due to a lack of data.

A Huge Part of Crucial Aid for Puerto Rico is Still In Limbo (HBO)

Maria Cruz-Vega can sometimes hear the foundation creaking when she’s in bed at night. There are holes in her floor — and her walls — and she prays the blue-tarp roof that covers her home won’t collapse on her and her family. Nearly 30,000 households in Puerto Rico are still living like this, literally without a real roof over their heads, almost two years after Hurricane Maria pummeled the island.

So far, Cruz-Vega has only received about $3,000 from FEMA. She may be able to get more aid soon.

VICE News traveled to Puerto Rico to see what recovery looks like almost two years after Hurricane Maria, just as a new hurricane season is getting started.

Puerto Rico is Ignoring its Zika crisis

Since Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico in 2017, the government has reported zero new cases of Zika. But doctors on the ground are finding an alarming number of new infections among pregnant women. The government’s claims that the Zika crisis is over is being called into question: Could there be no new official cases because officials have just stopped counting? For this PBS NewsHour report from The GroundTruth Project and Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting, Beth Murphy tracks the course of Zika in Puerto Rico over the course of two years.
For more on this story, listen to the Reveal episode “The Storm After the Storm.”