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Guterres said the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) aims to make thesystems already used by many wealthy countries, available to the developing world.
A third of the world’s people are without early warning coverage, especially in the least developed countries and developing small island states.
“This is unacceptable, particularly with climate impacts sure to get even worse,” Guterres said.
“Early warning systems save lives. Let us ensure they are working for everyone,” he added.
WMO expects high return on investment
The plan will cost $1.5 billion (€1.36 billion), and the WMO will present an action plan at the UN climate conference in Egypt in November.
The organization said the number of weather disasters it recorded went up fivefold from 1970 to 2019 due to climate change. There was also an increased number of extreme weather events and improved monitoring which contributed to the uptick in the number of events recorded.
“Thanks to better warnings, the number of lives lost decreased almost three-fold over the same period,” the WMO said.
The Global Commission on Adaptation suggested that spending $800 million on early-warning systems in developing countries alone would avoid up to $16 billion in annual losses.
lo/kb (AFP, AP, Reuters)
UN wants global climate early warning systems within 5 years (msn.com)