Climate Change infographics from WHO

The World Health Organisation (WHO) has published some useful infographics on the impacts of Climate Change on health. These are excellent for teachers, NGOs and activists looking for ways to communicate the challenges faced by everyone, everywhere.

WHO have also updated their Climate Change fact sheet. Here are the key facts:  

 
  • Climate change affects the social and environmental determinants of health – clean air, safe drinking water, sufficient food and secure shelter.
  • Between 2030 and 2050, climate change is expected to cause approximately 250 000 additional deaths per year, from malnutrition, malaria, diarrhoea and heat stress.
  • The direct damage costs to health (i.e. excluding costs in health-determining sectors such as agriculture and water and sanitation), is estimated to be between US$ 2-4 billion/year by 2030.
  • Areas with weak health infrastructure – mostly in developing countries – will be the least able to cope without assistance to prepare and respond.
  • Reducing emissions of greenhouse gases through better transport, food and energy-use choices can result in improved health, particularly through reduced air pollution.

The Glacier Trust exists to enable communities in remote mountain regions of Nepal to adapt to the impacts of Climate Change. Please support our work by making a donations today.

Comic books and Climate Change adaptation

Our friend Erica at Technical Nature has told us about a really great comic book written to communicate on Climate Change adaptation in Portugal. It was created for the ClimAdaPT.Local project and tells the story of a reporter and cameraman covering climate change adaptation around the country. It is based on real life stories and highlights the challenges people face and the solutions that are available to them. It is a great way to raise awareness and communicate the issues in an engaging way.

We also learned about Cartoon Abstracts this week, which is an attempt to communicate the findings of academic research in a more visual way. RSA Animate is another really popular example. There is definitely a trend emerging!

Portugal and Nepal face different challenges when it comes to climate change, but there are similarities and we are wondering whether a comic book could be helpful in Nepal? Please get in touch if you'd like to explore that opportunity with us! 

Here's a page from 'Special Report Adaptation to Climate Change in Portugal' - you can download the full comic from ClimAdaPT.Local. 

What is the worst case scenario?

In New York magazine this week, David Wallace-Wells is publishing an interesting series of articles on Climate Change. On Sunday, he published 'The Uninhabitable Earth' a ten point run down of what unchecked Global Warming might have in store for us. Wallace-Wells set out to write up what the worst case scenario might be. Some of it is terrifying, not least the sections on permafrost melt. It was the cover story, it is an important document.

There is a strong argument against using 'fear of the consequences' as a way to inspire environmental behaviour change and we are very sympathetic to this at The Glacier Trust. A better approach is to tell positive stories centered on a vision of a more appealing, low carbon, future. This is what we endeavour to do. We believe in the human spirit, human ingenuity and our ability to adapt. Our projects are proof that positive change is possible. But, this does not mean to say that we shouldn't ever spell out how severe a situation lies ahead for our children. Playing down the potential dangers does not, ultimately, do us any good, Wallace-Wells should be congratulated for documenting what might happen if we get 4, 5 or 6 degrees C of warming over the next few decades.

Following on from the main article is a series of extended interviews with leading climatologists, first: Wallace Smith Broecker, the man who coined the term 'Global Warming'; second, leading paleontologist Peter Ward; and third James Hansen, probably the world's most famous climate scientist.

The main article is a 20 minute read, probably a bit longer if you add in time to follow links, fact check and let out exasperated gasps, but it is worth digesting. It makes one stand out point - by the end of the century, vast numbers of human beings could be in danger of heat death. Especially in the tropics. Here's a passage:

Humans, like all mammals, are heat engines; surviving means having to continually cool off, like panting dogs. For that, the temperature needs to be low enough for the air to act as a kind of refrigerant, drawing heat off the skin so the engine can keep pumping. At seven degrees of warming, that would become impossible for large portions of the planet’s equatorial band, and especially the tropics, where humidity adds to the problem; in the jungles of Costa Rica, for instance, where humidity routinely tops 90 percent, simply moving around outside when it’s over 105 degrees Fahrenheit would be lethal. And the effect would be fast: Within a few hours, a human body would be cooked to death from both inside and out.

Someone hit the alarmist alarm bell! Michael Mann took to Facebook to do exactly that. Sandwiched in between the interviews with Ward, Hansen and Broecker is an unedited Q&A with Mann, the scientist most famous for the 'hockey stick graph'. It is an interesting read. Mann has also co-published an article in the Washington Post this week that points out some of the exaggerations in the Wallace-Wells article and rehearses the arguments against alarmism - also worth a read. 

There maybe more articles to come, keep an eye on @dwallacewells and @NYMag. We will re-tweet and post any follow up articles over on our twitter and facebook pages. 

If you'd like to enable families already living with the impacts of climate change, please make a donation to The Glacier Trust. 100% of your donation will go to our project work in Nepal.

The Stream - Beyond the poles

Last week we were contacted by the producers from Al Jazeera's show The Stream. We put them in touch with our long time collaborator in Nepal, Dr Dhananjay Regmi. Dr Regmi, who we know as DJ, led our last HiPER field study visit to the Periglacial environment in eastern Nepal. DJ is involved with several businesses, NGOs and initiatives in Nepal, he is also trained in Geomorphology to PhD level. 

Dr. Dhananjay Regmi, TGT partner, on Al Jazeera's The Stream, 22nd June 2017.

Dr. Dhananjay Regmi, TGT partner, on Al Jazeera's The Stream, 22nd June 2017.

DJ joined a panel of experts to discuss the causes and consequences of glacier melt around the world, specifically in non-polar regions. Joining DJ were: Aisha Khan from Mountain and Glacier Protection Organisation (Pakistan), Andrew Fountain from Portland State University and Musonda Mumba from UNEP.  

You can watch the full 30 minute show on The Stream's YouTube channel:

A long goodbye to glaciers?

UK: 22nd June, 8.30pm - Al Jazeera TV (Sky Channel 514) and online.Nepal: 23rd June, 1.15am - Al Jazeera TV and online

UK: 22nd June, 8.30pm - Al Jazeera TV (Sky Channel 514) and online.
Nepal: 23rd June, 1.15am - Al Jazeera TV and online

Earlier this week we were contacted by Al Jazeera International, they are doing a glaciers special as the latest episode of their series 'The Stream'. We have sent them various footage collected in the field and by our wonderful friends at Matter Studio, so look out for that.

We have also put them in touch with Dr Dhananjay Regmi in Kathmandu who led our most recent study trip to the high glaciers. Dr Regmi will be part of a panel discussion (via Skype) and will be outlining the problems associated with glacier melt, but also, the hidden menace of Permafrost thaw.

Tune into Al Jazeera tonight at 8.30pm (UK time) to watch the show.
Here's where you can find Al Jazeera on your TV: 

Sky Digital, Channel - 514
Freesat, Channel - 203
Freeview, Channel - 83
Freeview HD, Channel - 108
Virgin Media – Cable channel 622

It is also being streamed live on the Al Jazeera website and will be available to watch online soon after.

We'll write up a short summary of the show once it has aired.