Current:Home > StocksClimate change made Libya flooding 50 times more likely: Report -Ascend Finance Compass
Climate change made Libya flooding 50 times more likely: Report
View
Date:2025-04-12 16:00:12
LONDON -- Climate change was one of the main factors that led to the catastrophic flooding in Libya, according to a new report.
World Weather Attribution (WWA), a collaboration of scientists from all over the globe, released a new report on Tuesday saying that human-caused climate change played a role in the devastating heavy rainfall event earlier this month in the Mediterranean.
“Human-caused warming made the heavy rainfall up to 10 times more likely in Greece, Bulgaria and Türkiye and up to 50 times more likely in Libya, with building in flood plains, poor dam maintenance and other local factors turning the extreme weather into ahumanitarian disaster,” the statement said.
MORE: Earth records hottest 3 months on record, greenhouse gases and sea levels hit highs
While the WWA says that it is impossible to blame humans entirely as a direct cause of a natural disaster, it is emissions made and manufactured by humans and the warming of our planet that have increased the severity of these events.
“To quantify the effect of climate change on the heavy rain in the region, scientists analysed climate data and computer model simulations to compare the climate as it is today, after about 1.2°C of global warming since the late 1800s, with the climate of the past, following peer-reviewed methods,” the WWA said on Tuesday.
“For Greece, Bulgaria and Türkiye, the analysis showed that climate change made the heavy rain up to 10 times more likely to happen, with up to 40% more rain, as a result of human activities that have warmed the planet,” the report from the WWA concluded.
The report doesn’t place the blame squarely on climate change, however, and concluded that human error was another major element that contributed to the severity of the event.
Although the heavy rainfall in Libya is unusual and rare even factoring in climate change, the report highlighted poor dam maintenance, land use, armed conflict and political instability as factors that all played a significant role in the humanitarian disaster.
“The study also found that the destruction caused by the heavy rain was much greater due to factors that included construction in flood-prone areas, deforestation, and the consequences of the conflict in Libya,” the report said.
“The Mediterranean is a hotspot of climate change-fueled hazards. After a summer of devastating heatwaves and wildfires with a very clear climate change fingerprint, quantifying the contribution of global warming to these floods proved more challenging,” Friederike Otto, Senior Lecturer in Climate Science at Grantham Institute - Climate Change and the Environment, Imperial College London, said. “But there is absolutely no doubt that reducing vulnerability and increasing resilience to all types of extreme weather is paramount for saving lives in the future.”
MORE: Hurricane Lee becomes rare storm to rapidly intensify from Cat 1 to Cat 5 in 24 hours
Alex Hall, director of UCLA Center for Climate Science, told ABC News that events like the one in Libya are much more likely to occur because of greenhouse gas emissions of the past 150 years and that “there is now about 10% more water vapor in the atmosphere,” Hall explained that this serves as extra fuel for storms and leads to more intense precipitation.
Said Julie Arrighi, Director at the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre: “This devastating disaster shows how climate change-fueled extreme weather events are combining with human factors to create even bigger impacts, as more people, assets and infrastructure are exposed and vulnerable to flood risks.”
veryGood! (814)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- When is US Open men's final? How to watch Taylor Fritz vs Jannik Sinner
- A Colorado State Patrol trooper is shot while parked along a highway and kills gunman
- How many points did Caitlin Clark score Friday? Lynx snap Fever's five-game win streak
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Michigan mess and Texas triumph headline college football Week 2 winners and losers
- Cowabunga! New England town celebrates being the birthplace of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
- Parrots and turtles often outlive their owners. Then what happens?
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- All The Emmy-Nominated Book to Television Adaptations You'll Want to Read
Ranking
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Why #MomTok’s Taylor Frankie Paul Says She and Dakota Mortensen Will Never Be the Perfect Couple
- Stellantis recalls 1.5M Ram trucks to fix software bug that can disable stability control
- Will Ja'Marr Chase play in Week 1? What to know about Bengals WR's status
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Nicole Kidman Announces Death of Her Mom Janelle After Leaving Venice Film Festival
- Georgia school shooting suspect was troubled by a broken family, taunting at school, his father said
- Kelly Stafford Reveals the Toughest Part of Watching Quarterback Husband Matthew Stafford Play Football
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
A rural Georgia town in mourning has little sympathy for dad charged in school shooting
Recreational marijuana sales begin on North Carolina tribal land, drug illegal in state otherwise
Maui’s toxic debris could fill 5 football fields 5 stories deep. Where will it end up?
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
Sky's Angel Reese sidelined with season-ending wrist injury
Colorado vs. Nebraska score: Highlights from Cornhuskers football win over Buffaloes today
Evacuations ordered as wildfire burns in foothills of national forest east of LA