Adapt To Extreme Weather Or Pay Price, Expert Warns (PHOTOS)

Extreme Weather Climate Change Canada

First Posted: 11/18/11 06:12 AM ET Updated: 11/18/11 02:34 PM ET

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was set to release a report Friday examining the risks posed by the extreme weather events that are becoming increasingly frequent around the world. We talked to one of the report's co-ordinating lead authors about what general trends he and his colleagues found when drafting the report and how these trends might impact Canada.


Gordon McBean is a professor of geography and political science at the University of Western Ontario in London, Ont., and the director of policy studies at the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction. He is also chair of the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Studies and president-elect of the International Council for Science.


Extreme events


Definitions of what constitutes an extreme weather event vary, but for the purposes of the IPCC, the definition is based directly on measurements of things like temperature, wind velocity, precipitation levels and storm surge heights and where those measurements fall in a given region's weather distribution pattern.


Generally, a weather event is considered extreme if it is as rare or rarer than the 10th or 90th percentile. For example, if the rainfall distribution for a given city is that only one in 10 rainfall events produce 90 mm or more of rain per day, then an extreme rainfall event would be any that produced 90 mm or more of rain.


Certain industries, however, have their own definitions.


"Other people in the disaster risk-reduction community would define an extreme event as one that, say, causes more than $1 million in damages," McBean said.


Global trends


Globally, 75 per cent of disasters are climate-related. That means they are caused by weather events such as floods, storms, droughts or snow avalanches — as opposed to earthquakes or volcanoes, which are generally not climate-related.

SLIDESHOW: The Goderich, Ont., Tornado

The frequency of climate-related disasters seems to be increasing, and the number of deaths they cause is also going up — although that could be in part because there are more people than in the past clustered in large urban conglomerations and along coastal zones and river deltas so when a disaster does strike, more are impacted.


McBean concedes that data on disasters for many regions of the world is weak but says that where it does exist, it shows a clear trend.


"Where we have good data on the observations of the climate, you can show that there is an increased frequency of high-precipitation events — even in areas where the amount of rainfall is … getting less per year for reasons of climate change," McBean said.


"There's more of these heavy rain events, [and] analysis done by scientists shows that that change is related directly to the greenhouse gas — increasing — concentrations. In other words, it's a part of the human-caused climate change."


Canadian weather changes


The number of very hot days in Canadian summers is increasing at the same time as the number of extremely cold winter days is decreasing, the IPCC scientists found.


"Canada, on average, is getting warmer. We're also seeing more heavy-precipitation events — mostly in the summertime — intense rainfall events, and these are having economic and social impacts on Canadians as individuals and on our society overall."


Economic impacts


The changing patterns of severe weather events have a multitude of environmental and socioeconomic impacts — from small power outages that bring our workday to a halt to raging wildfires that destroy entire communities. The insurance industry is one sector that has been raising the alarm about the financial impacts of changing weather patterns.


"The insurance companies are saying it used to be that the biggest concern they had for a homeowner insurance policy was a fire caused by a malfunction or something within the house, or a burglary," McBean said. "Their biggest costs now are wind/rain-induced events."


One such event was the August 2005 rainstorm in Toronto that washed out a major road and caused millions of dollars in damages.


"The water that came from that rain event — over ground, in through sewer systems, directly in through windows, in through the roofs of homes — resulted in insurance companies paying out over $500 million," McBean said. "That's the biggest loss in Ontario's history — one rain event in 2005."


And lest anyone think that is the insurance industry's problem, McBean warns that those costs are eventually passed on to all of us through higher premiums.


Projections


If the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere continues to increase as it has been doing, McBean says we can expect to see much less precipitation in the southern Prairies and southern interior of British Columbia. In the summertime, those regions will warm more than other parts of Canada, posing challenges for the local water supply.


"We're really concerned about increasing drought-like conditions in those areas," McBean said. "That whole trend is even more prevalent south of the border. So, the western part of the United States — the Californias, the Utahs, the Nevadas, up towards the border — is going to be increasingly drier in terms of a lot more heat, which means evaporating water, and a lot less precipitation, which means not much coming down. So, where's the water going to come from? That's a concern overall."


Canadians in the North can also expect to see further reduction of Arctic sea ice, McBean said.


What now?


McBean says that what Canadians should take away from the IPCC report is a realization that we need to work harder not just to reduce greenhouse gas emissions so that the kinds of trends identified in the report don't get worse but to begin adapting our infrastructure so that it is better able to withstand the impacts of severe weather events — by redesigning building codes, for example.


"Canadians should take this report, and they should individually and collectively, through their government, ... take action to reduce our vulnerability," McBean said.

RELATED: The Goderich Tornado

Loading Slideshow...
  • Lost Home

    Debbie Hakkers looks for possessions in the second floor bedroom of her tornado-ravaged house in Goderich, Ontario on Monday August 22, 2011. Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty said the province will help the town of Goderich recover from a devastating tornado. (AP/CP/Frank Gunn)

  • Debris

    Flattened vehicles litter the ground in tornado-ravaged Goderich, Ontario on Monday August 22, 2011. People in a Goderich, Ont., dubbed "Canada's Prettiest Town," will be picking up the pieces today after the most powerful tornado in years devastated their community.(AP/CP/Frank Gunn)

  • Wreckage

    Debris litters downtown Goderich, Ontario after a tornado ripped through on Sunday, Aug. 21, 2011. Downtown businesses, century old buildings and several churches lost their roofs and upper floors Sunday as a powerful storm ripped through Goderich. (AP/CP/Frank Gunn)

  • Goderich Tornado

    Debris litters downtown Goderich, Ont., after a deadly tornado ripped through the town north of London, Ont., on Sunday, Aug. 21, 2011. (AP/CP/Geoff Robins)

  • Town Closed

    Emergency personnel cordon off streets in Goderich, Ontario after a tornado ripped through downtown on Sunday, Aug. 21, 2011. (AP/CP/Geoff Robins)

  • Debris Field

    Police inspect a damaged vehicle in Goderich, Ont., in the wake of the tornado. (AP/CP/Geoff Robins)

  • Sun Sets

    The sun sets on Goderich, Ont., and the debris field left after a tornado ripped through the downtown core on Sunday, Aug. 21, 2011. (AP/CP/Geoff Robins)

  • Chair Travels

    A chair from a building more than a block away is wedged in a tree in the aftermath of the Goderich, Ont. tornado on Sunday, August 21, 2011. (CP/Geoff Robins)

  • Brick

    Residents photograph a brick which smashed a truck's window in Goderich, Ont. on Sunday, August 21, 2011. Downtown businesses, century old buildings and several churches lost their roofs and upper floors Sunday as a powerful storm ripped through Goderich. THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Geoff Robins


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The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was set to release a report Friday examining the risks posed by the extreme weather events that are becoming increasingly frequent arou...
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was set to release a report Friday examining the risks posed by the extreme weather events that are becoming increasingly frequent arou...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinnerator
07:10 AM on 11/19/2011
I have no issue with our gov't and society adopting Green technologies, with one codicil. Any Green technology needs to be manufactured here in Canada. No outsourcing to South Korea or China. People point to China as this marvel of Green Technology while turning a blind eye to the fact it's built with prison labour or on the backs of people being paid starvation wages. The ignominy of that far out weighs the positive of Green.
10:56 PM on 11/18/2011
If one hectare of average foliage growth supports 19 people with oxygen . And there is 7 billion people and counting . More vehicles and counting everyday that uses oxygen to burn fuel . And more clearcutting everyday to get at the resources and create farmland to feed the increasing populaton . How long before people in the big cities start gasping for air ?
11:39 AM on 11/20/2011
Air moves. We'd all be gasping.
04:10 PM on 11/20/2011
Someone living in the woods surrounded by vegetation versus someone living in a city surrounded by buildings and vehicles . I think I'd take my chances surrounded by trees .
08:57 PM on 11/18/2011
Science schmience. The main thing is to keep on digging up the bitumen in the Athabasca tar sands so people can drive those vans without having to worry about the price of gas and the oil companies can make more money. And people must know the important thing is to refuse to demand more efficient everything and pay more at the front end or the back end. I mean do youu really really need that big flat screen? Do you really need so many clothes? One thing you may be sure of the Harper government isn't going to stop subsidizing the oil companies And if Ford can sell a car which is actually less efficient than the Model T then it will. People have to use their heads and think - do I want to have this unnecessary, inefficienthing or do I want to think that I don't have to worry about my house being destroyed by flood or winds.
05:12 PM on 11/18/2011
Weather is just one theory.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shandra Brown Valyear
Political Addict
12:04 PM on 11/18/2011
It is almost criminal that our government does not listen to science!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JJJSchmidt
09:52 PM on 11/18/2011
Science? You have a government that believes the Earth is only 6,000 years old. You'd be wasting your time trying to convince them.
11:35 AM on 11/18/2011
For a start, let's put the blame for climate change in a monitor mode. Watch the polluters, the big carbon footprinters. But more importantly let's start dealing with the change: conserve (as in water), redirect existing assets (rethink lawns and convert to vegetable gardens), support public transportation in the loudest terms, get serious about registration of vehicles based on their size (e.g. Yaris, Fiat 500 and similar $50./year; Ford XLT and similar, $500./year).

Governments offer subsidies for home solar panels, communities look at building a solar panel farm. These no longer need "proof"; they work all over the world. In N. America, they seem to be limited perhaps because the traditional power companies are discouraging them.

Git 'er done!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rob Vann
Hope for the best,Plan for the worst,Take what cms
01:44 PM on 11/18/2011
Excellent comment.. well said.
Or...FREE registration for any four plus passenger vehicle that gets 4.5L or less/100k.

There are no advantages for private power companies ie.. Nova Scotia Power's aim is to max profits from existing coal infrastructure for as long as possible. They need to be pushed although I suspect solutions like a carbon tax will probably be passed down to the consumer.
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
01:57 PM on 11/18/2011
All good suggestions. I especially like the idea of vehicle registration. Provinces could pass on the extra revenue to municipalities for programs like bike lanes.
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Jay from Ottawa
sovereignty sale, 1.3T OBO
10:52 AM on 11/18/2011
I foresee insurance companies not making as much money as they used to because of increases in payouts. The results would likely be increased premiums for all Canadians as a insurance companies bottom line is making money.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rob Vann
Hope for the best,Plan for the worst,Take what cms
01:48 PM on 11/18/2011
It's happening in the US already.. In some coastal areas it is impossible to get insurance for storm damage and flooding.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mmoskvit
Reader. Hitchensian. Fellow traveler.
10:52 AM on 11/18/2011
First thing's first. Throw out the fascist wannabe government.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinnerator
07:05 AM on 11/19/2011
No first things first, round up all you half wits who have nothing positive to add to a discussion and just want to tear this country down and dump you all on Baffin Island.
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john frodo
armchair expert
09:27 AM on 11/18/2011
First thing we should toughen building codes, roofs must meet hurricane standards, houses must not flood etc.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rob Vann
Hope for the best,Plan for the worst,Take what cms
01:56 PM on 11/18/2011
and build structures that are serviceable for hundreds of years. Building materials are highly energy intensive in manufacture and seldom recycled ..disposable housing just doesn't cut it anymore.