Mombasa (Kenya):From drought to cyclones and sea level rise, the cost of damage caused by climate change in Africa will only get higher as the world warms, sparking concerns from activists and officials about how to pay for it. Africa's islands and coastal states and the 116 million people that inhabit them will be heavily exposed to rising seas and will spend about USD 50 billion in damages by 2050, a report released on Thursday by the United Nations' World Meteorological Organisation said.
It added that drought over the last 50 years in the Horn and southern Africa, exacerbated by climate change, has claimed the lives of over half a million people, with losses estimated at USD 70 billion. Over 1,000 floods in the same time period claimed over 20,000 lives, it said. The report's findings stirred renewed calls for compensation for the continent by many who believe rich nations that emit far more planet-warming gases into the atmosphere should foot the bill for climate catastrophes, known as loss and damage in climate negotiations.
As a continent we feel that the issue of loss and damage needs to be addressed," said Harsen Nyambe, the director of sustainable environment at the African Union. It is a controversial issue and developed countries are afraid because it has serious financial implications. The failure to create a loss and damage fund means African countries are without recourse or compensation from the wealthy nations most responsible for climate change, said a report by the philanthropic Mo Ibrahim Foundation released earlier this year.