Showing posts with label extreme weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label extreme weather. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2015

Ready for the Hunger Games? Extreme Weather Could Lead to Severe Food Shocks And Civil Unrest - http://clapway.com/2015/08/14/ready-for-the-hunger-games-extreme-weather-could-lead-to-severe-food-shocks-and-civil-unrest123/

You might want to start thinking about stockpiling food and preparing to defend it with your life, as extreme weather brought on by global climate change, such as heavy storms and severe droughts, is a serious threat to food production and could cause serious food shocks and price spikes, leading to an unprecedented rate of starvation and civil unrest in the world. This is according to a report written for the British government by the joint U.K.-U.S. taskforce known as the Taskforce on Extreme Weather and Global Food System Resilience.


No Longer a Once-a-Century Event


The current pressure on the world’s food supply is already a serious problem as it is, but with the increasing threat posed by global climate change, the danger of severe food shocks in the near future is very real. Experts warned that under past conditions, food shortages were likely to occur only once every one hundred years, but with the recent climate change trend and the extreme weather that is resulting from it, the world is likely to see food shortages happen at least once every thirty years.


The report also stated that knee-jerk reactions from governments around the world could further exacerbate the problem. Such responses include the halting of imports or exports of certain crops or food items. Such an action, while seemingly beneficial for the people of a particular country, could spell absolute disaster for people in other countries, who will most likely experience a sharp spike in the price of food items as a result of an import or export ban.


Interconnectedness is an Asset and an Issue


The experts that led the study and wrote the report studied the production of the world’s most common commodity crops: wheat, soybeans, rice, and maize. They focused on how extreme weather, such as severe droughts, storms, and flooding, could affect the production of those crops in the future.


They said that most of the production of those crops comes from a relatively small number of countries, like China, India, and the United States, so food shocks could result if extreme weather hits those places and causes a disturbance in their food production, because this would greatly impact global food supplies. Because the world has become so interconnected over the past century, supplies from countries that produce more food items could help local food shock problems in other countries, but as a result of that it might also increase food shock problems in the countries that produce those food items due to a rise in demand and exports.


Saipan After Soudelor: A Picture of What is to Come?


A preview of the threat of severe food shocks as a result of extreme weather brought on by climate change can be seen in the situation on Saipan, the largest island in the United States Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI). On August 2nd, the island was devastated by the strongest storm of 2015, Typhoon Soudelor. It cut off power and water to the population and caused massive damage to the island’s infrastructure and agriculture. Relief efforts have since been pouring in, and some of the island’s power and water capabilities have been restored.


Unfortunately, the damage to the local food production has been done. Ed Propst, a local Representative in the CNMI Legislature, said in a Facebook post, “It is hard to talk about nutrition when most families just need food in their stomachs. It is really about survival at this point. Hunger requires calories, and with all of our local produce wiped out, we are completely dependent on produce being shipped in from thousands of miles away.”


Reports have also been posted on Facebook of some local businesses raising their prices and price gouging in the aftermath of Typhoon Soudelor and in anticipation of two new typhoons that are on their way to Saipan. If such practices continue, not only will food shocks be a result of the extreme weather, but also civil unrest, as food and supplies become scarce and local residents become outraged at the unethical and seemingly heartless businesses who would seek to profit off of their suffering.


Saipan is now under Typhoon Condition III, which means that another typhoon could hit within 24-36 hours. Another direct hit could spell further disaster for the people of Saipan, causing severe food supply shortages and giving the rest of the world a taste of what is to come as the rest of the century unfolds and proper action is not taken to address the threat of climate change and the food shocks that will inevitably result in the wake of storms, droughts, and flooding.



 


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Ready for the Hunger Games? Extreme Weather Could Lead to Severe Food Shocks And Civil Unrest

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Beware of upcoming weather conditions breeding #brush #fires. - http://clapway.com/2015/07/19/extreme-weather-conditions-responsible-for-the-rise-in-brush-fires-322/

According to the Florida Forest Service, there has been a significant increase in brush fires over the last 3 months. Lightning from summer storms in addition to abnormally dry weather is responsible for the increase of fires.


81 brush fires are responsible for damage to 6,363 acres of land in the Miami-Dade area. At the same point during 2014, 51 fires had been documented. In addition to lightning the absence of rainfall, humidity, wind, and both Sawgrass and Pine Rockland from the Everglades assist fires in their ability to move quickly.


On July 13, 2015 two brush fires, both caused by lightning, managed to burn upwards of 500 acres of grass.


Wildlife fire agencies use the Keetch-Byram Drought Index to determine the dryness of soil; the Miami-Dade area falls high on the index with a rating of more than 550. Last year the same area had a rating of 252. “When you start to get above 500, fire has a tendency to spread quicker,” said Scott Peterich, wildfire mitigation specialist from Florida Forest Service.


Precautions to Take Against Brush Fires


Those who live in close proximity to wild fire areas have been advised to eliminate leaves, twigs, pine needles, and additional flammable vegetation from roofs to mitigate the risks of brush fires. “Our burn teams create a detailed prescribed fire plan and adhere to the plan insuring a safe burn for both the forest and public,” said Peterich.


While 95% of forest fires are due to human activity there are instances where states burn dead vegetation to diminish the chance that those areas will be apart of a forest fire.


These contained fires recycle nutrients and stimulate both vegetative and animal variety in addition for opening the land up to direct sunlight. California is currently experiencing the worst drought in its recorded history in addition to an increase in wild fires. Officials have fought more than 3,200 fires so far.


Fires that move from unoccupied areas into developed areas are titled as urban interface. Additionally, when the smoke from wild fires moves closer to the highway it is responsible for low-visibility and dangerous driving conditions.



 


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Extreme Weather Conditions Responsible for the Rise in Brush Fires