Drought has hit more than 1.5 billion people since 1998 and the numbers are set to “grow dramatically,” says UN special representative
By Arthur Neslen
BRUSSELS, June 17 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Water scarcity and drought are set to wreak damage on a scale to rival the COVID-19 pandemic with risks growing rapidly as global temperatures rise, according to the United Nations.
"Drought is on the verge of becoming the next pandemic and there is no vaccine to cure it," Mami Mizutori, the U.N.'s special representative for disaster risk reduction, told an online press briefing ahead of the report's release.
Already, droughts have triggered economic losses of at least $124 billion and hit more than 1.5 billion people between 1998 and 2017, according to a U.N. report published on Thursday.
But even these figures, it said, are "most likely gross under-estimates".
Global warming has now intensified droughts in southern Europe and western Africa, the U.N. report said with "some confidence". And the number of victims is set to "grow dramatically" unless the world acts, Mizutori said.
About 130 countries could face a greater risk of drought this century under a high-emissions scenario cited by the U.N.
Another 23 countries will confront water shortages because of population growth, with 38 nations affected by both, it said.
Drought - like a virus - tends to last a long time, have a wide geographic reach and cause knock-on damage, Mizutori said.
"It can indirectly affect countries which are not actually experiencing the drought through food insecurity and the rise of food prices," Mizutori said.
The U.N. expects more frequent and severe droughts in most of Africa, central and south America, central Asia, southern Australia, southern Europe, Mexico and the United States.
Ibrahim Thiaw, executive secretary of the U.N. Convention to Combat Desertification, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation that deteriorating soil, caused in part by poor land management, had brought the world close to "a point of no return".
The U.N. has not researched the effect that desertification could have on internal migration within continents but Thiaw said that it was no longer unthinkable, even in Europe.
"It is certainly a phenomenon that is happening in other parts of the world and may well occur in Europe," he said
More than 40% of the European Union's agricultural imports could become "highly vulnerable" to drought by the middle of this century due to climate change, according to a separate study published in the journal Nature Communications this week.
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(Reporting by Arthur Neslen. Editing by Lyndsay Griffiths and Megan Rowling. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)
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