Deadly weather: the human cost of 2018's climate disasters – visual guide

Source(s): Guardian, the (UK)

By Daniel Levitt, Peter Andringa, Frank Hulley-Jones, Lydia Smears and Jonathan Watts

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Starting now, massive cuts in man made emissions are essential if global warming is to be kept to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels by the end of this century. Even half a degree beyond that will significantly raise the risks of drought, floods, extreme heat and poverty for hundreds of millions of people, as well as dooming all the world’s coral reef systems and, probably, Arctic sea ice.

Even now, at 1.1C of warming, the world’s climate is already entering dangerous territory.

According to data from the Centre of Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters, in 2018 so far approximately 5,000 people have died and 28.9 million have needed emergency assistance or humanitarian aid because of extreme weather.

Here is a global calendar of this year’s major disasters. Scientists say these types of event are becoming more frequent and intense as emissions rise and the planet heats up. The map shows the scale of the human impact, from January to the end of November.

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