SYDNEY: Millions of people in Asia-Pacific region, including India,
could be forced from their homes and suffer increasing disease,
cyclones and floods caused by global warming, scientists warned on Monday.

Climate change will seriously threaten regional human security and
national economies this century, according to a report by the
Australian government's Commonwealth Scientific and Research
Organisation (CSIRO).

"Chronic food and water insecurity and epidemic disease may impede
economic development in some nations," the report says.

"Degraded landscapes and inundation of populated areas by rising seas
may ultimately displace millions of individuals, forcing intra- and
inter-state migration."

The report, commissioned by a coalition of environmental, aid, church
and development groups, analyses predictions of temperature increases
of up to two degrees Celsius by 2030 and up to seven degrees by 2070.

Scientists blame global warming on greenhouse gases such as carbon
dioxide, produced mainly by the burning of fossil fuels including coal
and oil, for causing rising temperatures worldwide.

"Rapid growth in large regional economies such as China and India has
elevated human prosperity," the report says.

"However, unless ultimately decoupled from fossil-fuel use, such
growth also threatens to exacerbate the climate challenge."

The CSIRO says that remaining below the generally accepted threshold
for "dangerous" climate change of about two degrees Celsius would
require global greenhouse gas emissions to be reduced by 30-55 percent
below 1990 levels.

 "If you don't, if you did nothing, you're likely to blow right past
it," Benjamin Preston, key author of the report, told AFP.

Temperatures are likely to rise more quickly in the arid areas of
northern Pakistan and India and western China, the report says.

But the region will also be affected by a rise in the global sea level
of up to 16 centimetres (six inches) by 2030 and by up to 50
centimetres in 2070, along with regional variables.

Preston said two studies contained in the report estimate that a
sea-level rise of a metre (39 inches) would displace between 75
million and 150 million people in the Asia-Pacific region.

Most at risk are the low-lying river deltas of Bangladesh, India,
Vietnam and China, as well as the small Pacific island states.

Changing patterns of temperature and rainfall would also cause a shift
in the distribution of dengue and malaria-carrying mosquitoes, likely
exposing millions more people to such diseases by the end of the century.

"Higher temperatures may reduce the risk of cold-weather mortality,
but increase heat-related mortality, while increased flooding and
intensification of tropical cyclones would increase climate-related
injuries and deaths," the report says.






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