Gwynne Dyer: Is Typhoon Haiyan a harbinger of storms to come?

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      “We’ve been telling the rest of the world we don’t want what’s happening to us to happen to everyone else,” said Lucille L. Sering, the vice chair of the Philippines’ Climate Commission, as the country struggled to cope with the aftermath of Typhoon Haiyan. “This is your early warning system...we will all eventually be victims of this phenomenon.”

      A full week after the typhoon roared through the eastern Visayas, the number of people killed is still unknown. Ten thousand dead is the number being used in the media, but the area around Tacloban city alone may have lost that many. Many other parts of Samar and Leyte islands are still inaccessible to both media and aid workers.

      Another reason the death toll remains unknown is that the victims are still dying in large numbers, and not all of them from infected wounds and other storm-related injuries. The chronically ill are dying because vital medicines and medical procedures like dialysis are unavailable. They will soon be joined by those who die of infectious diseases like dysentery, cholera, and typhoid fever, which become epidemic about a week after sanitation services break down.

      Most of these later deaths could have been prevented if emergency aid had arrived more quickly after the typhoon struck, and there will doubtless be one or more inquiries later on that find various authorities at fault for responding too slowly. But these are islands, and most airports and harbours in the worst-hit areas are out of commission. There were bound to be long delays in getting aid in after a calamity of this scale.

      But the question that people will be asking elsewhere is: will we really all become victims of this and similar phenomena? Is this truly an early warning of storms so big and strong that they will change the way we live? The answer, of course, is maybe.

      As scientists always hasten to explain, you can never attribute a particular weather event to climate change with complete confidence. Normal variations in the weather include occasional extreme events as destructive as all but the very worst storms that you would see in a world that was, say, 2 degrees C warmer. The difference is that in a warmer world, you will see a lot more of these extreme events.

      PHILIPPINE AIR FORCE

      But consider this. The Philippines is the most-exposed large country in the world to tropical cyclones. Their tracks most often take them across northern Luzon or the eastern Visayas, and about six to nine of them make landfall each year. They do a lot of damage, but by and large Filipinos have learned to ride them out. However, you cannot just ride out something as big as Haiyan.

      What did most of the killing in Samar and Leyte last week was not the high winds (although they stripped off almost every roof in the affected areas). It was the “storm surge” that submerged coastal regions to the height of a two-story building. The pressure at the centre of the typhoon was so low that a “hump” of water six metres high was pushed up beneath the eye and travelled with it.

      Shelters are not much good against that sort of thing unless (as in Bangladesh) you start building them on elevated platforms. Even then, you may decide that you want to move elsewhere if your city is going to be inundated and destroyed every 10 years or so. The east coast of Luzon is very sparsely populated for precisely this reason, and this may be the future that awaits the eastern Visayas as well if storms of this scale become more frequent.

      The very worst typhoon that hit the Philippines since detailed records began in the 19th century was Thelma, which killed about 5,100 people in 1991. But of the next worst nine, all of which killed over a thousand people, six have happened in the past decade: 2004, 2006, 2008, 2011, 2012, and 2013.

      So Haiyan may really be an early warning of what is to come, not just for the Philippines but for China and Japan, Burma and Bangladesh, the Windward Islands and Florida— indeed, for any coastal area that is within a thousand kilometres of the usual tracks of tropical storms. And at some point, people will decide that it’s just not worth living in such constant danger. They will become, for want of a better word, “climate refugees”.

      In some areas, it will be frequent mega-storms that drive them out. In other areas it will be drought and desertification, or heat so great that it kills the crops that people depend on. There are going to be a lot of refugees, and not many places that are willing to let them in.

      Lucille Sering is right: this is an early warning of how the warming will unfold, and what the impacts on human societies will be. But we are getting lots of early warnings, and so far we are managing to ignore them all.

      Comments

      5 Comments

      e.a.f.

      Nov 14, 2013 at 12:18pm

      these weather patterns have most likely happened in the past, we the current population simply don't know about it. The earth was unpopulated for some time. It is therefore important we do not pollute our land and water. It will be needed for the future to grow food. Society will have to adapt to the changes in weather and people will hve to move away from coastal areas, or the population severely reduced. For those who wish to remain, elevated shelters with supplies will be necessary. Countries might also want to take note and post their military with supplies in areas where extreme storms are coming, before they arrive. Right now the problem is a lack of supplies. If the supplies had been there already, it would hve helped no end. Or the military or civilian response teams need to be in these areas on a full time basis. People can't wait 2 or 3 days for help. Too many will die. of course for some governments, that maybe part of their solution.

      Rich Must Survive

      Nov 14, 2013 at 7:22pm

      Only the rich must survive. All else may perish. That is how our society is set up and it will come to pass. Why should the rich care about anyone else? And by rich I don't mean the schmucks making less than millions. Those are mere plebes.

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      Ann052204

      Nov 17, 2013 at 9:22pm

      I enjoyed reading your comment, e.a.f. You make some absolutely wonderful points that we can only hope our leaders would read!

      In response to User: Rich must Survive, How can you be so callous? Are you familiar with the word and/or definition of empathy, humanity or compassion?
      We would be wise to worry more about where we will spend eternity than to focus on the things of this earth that shall pass away. If you take notice, after such devastation occurs, many are left with only one another if they are even that fortunate, in the end.
      God Bless you all.

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      McRocket

      Nov 18, 2013 at 2:46am

      My guess is that humanity is doomed...people are just too selfish and arrogant to take the steps necessary to apparently save themselves.
      And if humans extinguish themselves...good riddance.
      Imo, any species that dumb is no great loss to the universe.

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      Mosby

      Nov 24, 2013 at 5:25pm

      We in the developed world are ignoring the warnings because the worst effects are usually not happening to us. But a few more Hurricane Katrinas and Hurricane Sandys will change that.

      And the responses will include moving to less vulnerable areas and building protective structures and more durable homes, as Gwynne mentioned.

      What taxpaying citizens of developed countries will NOT do is voluntarily lower their standard of living (by using less energy & resources), so we'll eventually end up drowning in our own cesspool because we're collectively too stupid to prevent it.