Areas of the World Most Vulnerable to Climate Change

Pat Lunsford
Areas of the world most vulnerable to climate change are those that had nothing to do with the cause such as Latin America, India, Egypt, east Africa and Asia yet they will bear severe consequences.

According to the World Health Organization, climate change already causes 150,000 deaths a year through heat waves and drought which increases the spread of disease. Currently there is a rise in malaria in Latin America while East Africa is battling rift valley fever and Thailand struggles with hemorrhagic fever.

Sub-Saharan Africa and coastal regions along the Indian and Pacific Oceans will most likely be one of the hardest hit by climate change as they are not financially prepared to deal with it.

While east Africa deals with severe drought, Dhanaur, India is suffering serious flooding due to increased rainfall which has taken lives, devastated property and wiped out crops. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be an end in sight. Those who depended on crops to make a living have not only lost their homes due to flooding but have also lost their only income.

Africa will indeed be affected by climate change as drought worsens and all crops begin to fail. The drought conditions which are currently being experienced are predicted to pale in comparison to what lies ahead. This is not something they brought on themselves and something needs to be done immediately as the survival of a whole continent is at stake.

Parts of Australia are showing serious affects of climate change as many of the remote areas along with some northern regions have experience a serious increase in heat waves. Bacterial diarrhea has been a growing problem in these areas for the indigenous people and Dengue fever has increased at an alarming rate.

Pakistan has struggled with water shortages over the last decade and climate change has caused this trend to go from bad to worse. There has been a steady decrease in rainfall over the last forty years while the temperature has increased which points to environmental catastrophe.

Earth seems to have been undergoing a series of changes for several years now and the areas of the world that have been feeling the first affects are the poorest regions. Famines, pestilences, and earthquakes have increased worldwide at an alarming rate. Food riots have broken out in various parts of the world and diseases for which there is no cure are hitting the headlines regularly.

NASA scientists are shocked to learn that the intense earthquake that hit Chili may have shifted the Earth's axis by altering the planet's mass and thereby changing its rotation. It is a small change but a change nonetheless and it is permanent. The only result they have been able to determine so far from this change is that our days will be 1.26 microseconds shorter.

Areas most vulnerable to climate change are naturally going to be the first to suffer its affects but ultimately, the whole world will be affected. If we are approaching the period of history that was predicted years ago, which many believe we are, this is only the beginning. What's more, the most advanced countries will suffer worse than the poorer nations. The higher one is, the harder they fall.

Climate change is worldwide and currently, the most affected areas are those least able to cope. At the rate in which climate change is accelerating, it won't be long before even the wealthiest nations will be unable to cope. One doesn't have to understand the science behind climate change to realize the impact it is having around the world. Crops are failing and food shortages are getting worse every year due to abnormal weather patterns.

Areas of the world most vulnerable to climate change depend on the wealthier nations for help but when the wealthy nations begin suffering, who will help them?

The Answer

Published by Pat Lunsford

Pat Lunsford is climate change channel manager for Helium.com and site owner of Christian Video Resource at http://www.patlunsford.webs.com/ (click the link below under 'affiliations') Writing has always...  View profile

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