Early Warning systems must protect everyone within five years

World Meteorological Organization (WMO)  Published  23 March 2022  Press 
Release Number: 23032022
https://public.wmo.int/en/media/press-release/%E2%80%8Bearly-warning-systems-must-protect-everyone-within-five-years


UN unveils ambitious target to adapt to climate change and more extreme weather

Within the next five years, everyone on Earth should be protected by early 
warning systems against increasingly extreme weather and climate change, 
according to an ambitious new United Nations target announced today.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres has tasked the World Meteorological 
Organization (WMO) to lead the effort and present an action plan to achieve 
this goal at the next UN climate conference in Egypt this November.

The announcement was made on World Meteorological Day on 23 March, which this 
year has the theme Early Warning and Early Action.

“Human-caused climate disruption is now damaging every region. The most recent 
report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change details the suffering 
already happening. Each increment of global heating will further increase the 
frequency and intensity of extreme weather events,” said Mr Guterres.

“We must invest equally in adaptation and resilience. That includes the 
information that allows us to anticipate storms, heatwaves, floods and 
droughts,” said the UN chief.

However, one-third of the world’s people, mainly in least developed countries 
and small island developing states, are still not covered by early warning 
systems.  In Africa, it is even worse: 60 per cent of people lack coverage.

“This is unacceptable, particularly with climate impacts sure to get even 
worse,” said Mr Guterres.

World Met Day 2022 Early Warning and Early Action

“Early warnings and action save lives. To that end, today I announce the United 
Nations will spearhead new action to ensure every person on Earth is protected 
by early warning systems within five years.  I have asked the World 
Meteorological Organization to lead this effort and to present an action plan 
at the next UN climate conference, later this year in Egypt,” Mr Guterres said 
in a video message to the World Meteorological Day ceremony.

“We must boost the power of prediction for everyone and build their capacity to 
act. On this World Meteorological Day, let us recognize the value of early 
warnings and early action as critical tools to reduce disaster risk and support 
climate adaptation.”

Climate change is already very visible through more extreme weather in all 
parts of the world. We are seeing more intense heatwaves and drought and forest 
fires. There is more water vapor in the atmosphere, which leads to extreme 
rainfall and deadly flooding. The warming of the ocean fuels more powerful 
tropical storms and rising sea levels increase the impacts.

Over the past 50 years (1970-2019), a weather, climate or water-related 
disaster has occurred on average every day – taking the lives 115 people and 
causing US$ 202 million in losses daily, according to a 2021 WMO report on 
disaster statistics.

The number of recorded disasters increased by a factor of five over that 
50-year period, driven by human-induced climate change, more extreme weather 
events and improved reporting.

Thanks to better warnings, the number of lives lost decreased almost three-fold 
over the same period because of better weather forecasts and proactive and 
coordinated disaster management.

“The growing number of disasters due to climate change is endangering 
implementation of a large number of Sustainable Development Goals. Besides very 
critical mitigation it is growingly important to invest in climate adaptation. 
One of the highest returns of investments is reached by improving the weather, 
water and climate early warning services and related observing infrastructures. 
There is a need to invest US$ 1.5 billion during the coming five years to 
improve the quality of the services and related infrastructures especially in 
the LDC and SIDS countries,” said WMO Secretary-General Prof. Petteri Taalas.

What is an Early Warning System?

An Early Warning System for floods, droughts, heatwaves or storms, is an 
integrated system which allows people to know that hazardous weather is on its 
way, and informs how governments, communities and individuals can act to 
minimize the impending impacts.

These systems allow us to monitor the real time atmospheric conditions on land 
and at sea and to effectively predict future weather and climate events using 
advanced computer numerical models. The aim is to understand what risks the 
foreseeable storms could bring to an area that will be affected – which may 
differ if it is a city or rural area, polar, coastal or mountainous regions. 
Early warning systems must include agreed response plans for governments, 
communities and people, to minimize anticipated impacts. A comprehensive early 
warning system must also include lessons learned from past events, in order to 
continually improve responses ahead of future weather, climate, water and 
related environmental hazards.

Early Warnings Work

World Met Day 2022 Early Warning and Early Action  The 2019 Global Commission 
on Adaptation flagship report ‘Adapt Now’ found that Early Warning Systems 
provide more than a tenfold return on investment – the greatest of any 
adaptation measure included in the report.

The report also found that just 24 hours warning of a coming storm or heatwave 
can cut the ensuing damage by 30 per cent and spending US$ 800 million on such 
systems in developing countries would avoid losses of $3-16 billion per year.

And yet, despite these known great benefits, one in three people globally is 
still not covered by early warning services, and the proportion of people not 
covered is almost twice as high in Africa. Vulnerable people are 
disproportionately affected.

The Glasgow Climate Pact (agreed at the UN Climate Change Conference COP26 in 
November 2021) emphasizes the urgency of scaling up action to enhance adaptive 
capacity, strengthen resilience and reduce vulnerability to climate change. It 
also urges developed countries to urgently and significantly scale up their 
provision of climate finance, technology transfer and capacity-building for 
adaptation.

The UK government, which was president of COP26, and the Egyptian government, 
which will preside over COP27 in Sharm-El-Sheikh, recently renewed calls on 
developed countries to follow through on their commitment to at least double 
their climate finance for adaptation to developing countries by 2025, aiming at 
achieving balance between funding adaptation and mitigation.

Ambassadors of both the UK and Egypt are due to speak at the World 
Meteorological Day ceremony, which included high level panels of speakers 
illustrating the need for, and success of, early warnings and early action.

Synergies and partnerships

WMO will spearhead the effort to achieve universal coverage of early warning 
services, in close collaboration with key partners as a collective contribution 
towards global adaptation efforts.

It will seek to close observation gaps, to expand the capacity for all 
countries to issue warnings ahead of a disaster, and simultaneously improve 
their capacity to act on those warnings, and to respond in a manner that is 
people-centred, inclusive and accessible.

Following on from Mr Guterres’ announcement, WMO will convene key agencies, 
countries and groups already active in the field of Hydromet and Risk Informed 
Early Warning capacity development to build on the excellent existing efforts 
and create a global plan by COP27. Closing the early warning gap will require 
inputs from actors throughout the entire early warning to early action value 
chain.

The new plan seeks to build on existing WMO activities and partnerships.

These include:

The WMO Global Multi-hazard Alert System (GMAS) leverages progress in early 
warnings against hazards such as tropical cyclones, flooding and coastal 
inundation.

The Systematic Observations Financing Facility (SOFF), which was established at 
COP26 jointly with UNEP and UNDP as a new financing mechanism. It seeks to 
significantly increase the availability of basic weather and climate 
observations data and close the gaps, especially in the Least Developed 
Countries and Small Island Developing States. This data is the basis of all 
weather forecast and climate services and so these gaps undermine the 
effectiveness of all climate adaptations actions and investments. The Nordic 
Development Fund (NDF) recently committed 10 million Euros to SOFF.

The Climate Risk and Early Warning Systems Initiative (CREWS) bridges the 
capacity gap in life-saving early warning systems for vulnerable countries. The 
initiative ensures that prediction and warnings of extreme events are received, 
understood and acted on by people most at risk. It has been widely lauded as a 
success story and now has a portfolio of more than US$ 90 million. In 2022, WMO 
is scaling-up its action on early warning systems in Africa through CREWS with 
a new US$ 5 million early warning programme for the Central Africa region. 
Similar programmes are under preparation for the Horn and East Africa regions.
Notes to Editors:

World Meteorological Day digital assets, visuals and speeches are available 
here.

The World Meteorological Day ceremony begins at 1300 GMT on 23 March. It is a 
hybrid event. Details of the programme and livestream are available here.

World Meteorological Day commemorates the coming into force of the Convention 
establishing the World Meteorological Organization on 23 March 1950. It 
highlights the vital role of national meteorological and hydrological services 
in protecting lives and property.

The World Meteorological Organization is the United Nations System’s 
authoritative voice
on Weather, Climate and Water

For further information contact: Brigitte Perrin, Head of Strategic 
Communications, [email protected] Tel 41-79 5130512 or Clare Nullis, WMO media 
officer, [email protected]. Tel 41-79-7091397





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