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By Michael McCarthy
The Independent UK
Tuesday 24 July 2007
Flood-ravaged
Britain is suffering from a wholly new type of civil emergency, it is
clear today: a disaster caused by 21st-century weather.
This
weather is different from anything that has gone before. The floods it
has caused, which have left more than a third of a million people
without drinking water, nearly 50,000 people without power, thousands
more people homeless and caused more than £2bn worth of damage - and
are still not over - have no precedent in modern British history.
Nothing
in the past hundred years, in terms of flooding caused by rainfall, has
been as bad. According to the Environment Agency, even the previous
worst case, the extensive floods of spring 1947, which were aggravated
by the vast snow melt that followed an exceptionally hard winter, has
been surpassed.
"We
have not seen flooding of this magnitude before," said the agency
yesterday. "The benchmark was 1947, and this has already exceeded it."
And the 1947 floods were said to have been the worst for 200 years.
Most
remarkable of all is the fact that the astonishing picture the nation
is now witnessing - whole towns cut off, gigantic areas underwater,
mass evacuations, infrastructure paralysed and grotesquely swollen
rivers, from the Severn and the Thames downwards not even at their
peaks yet - has all been caused by a single day's rainfall. A month's
worth and more in an hour. It is obvious that the Government and the
civil powers, from Gordon Brown down to the emergency services, are
struggling to cope, not only with the sheer physical scale of the
disaster itself, but with the very concept of it. It is entirely
unfamiliar. It is new. Yet it is exactly what has been forecast for the
past decade and more.
No
one can yet attribute the flood events of the past week, or indeed,
those of June, when Yorkshire suffered what Gloucestershire and
Worcestershire are suffering now - again from one single day's rainfall
- directly to global warming. All climates have a natural variability
which includes exceptional occurrences.
But
the catastrophic "extreme rainfall events" of the summer of 2007, on 24
June and 20 July, are entirely consistent with repeated predictions of
what climate change will bring.
It
is nearly 10 years since the scientists of the UK Climate Impacts
Programme first gave their detailed forecast of what global warming had
in store for Britain in the 21st century - and high up on the list was
rainfall, increasing both in frequency and intensity.
This
was thought most likely to happen in winter, with summers predicted to
be hotter and dryer. But yesterday Peter Stott of the Met Office's
Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research, an author of a new
scientific paper linking increases in rainfall to climate change,
commented: "It is possible under climate change that there could be an
increase of extreme rainfall even under general drying."
The
paper by Dr Stott and other authors, reported in The Independent
yesterday, detects for the first time a "human fingerprint" in rainfall
increases in recent decades in the mid-latitudes of the Northern
Hemisphere - that is, it finds they were partly caused by global
warming, itself caused by emissions of greenhouse gases.
The
public as a whole appears not to have taken the extreme rainfall
predictions on board, thinking of climate change in terms of hotter
weather. But the science community has been fully aware of it, and has
steadily reinforced the warnings.
One
of the most important came from a group of experts commissioned to look
at the risks by the Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir David King, under the
Government's Foresight Programme, in 2004. Their report, Future
Flooding, said that unless precautions were taken, more severe floods
brought about by climate change could massively increase the number of
people and the amount of property at risk. Yet once again, this hardly
penetrated the public consciousness.
Amidst
all the news of communities being overwhelmed by water yesterday, one
very significant announcement, from Gordon Brown and the Secretary of
State for the Environment, Hilary Benn, was that the Government is
setting up an independent inquiry to look at the flood events of June
and July.
Its
report will be immensely important and may prove a milestone in terms
of the British public's appreciation of the reality of climate change.
It will doubtless focus on the key problem in terms of flood response -
there is no one minister, or other person, in overall charge - but it
may also take a view of the disaster in terms of global warming, and
may well come to the conclusion that we are already witnessing the
future. The floods of 2007 may eventually be regarded as a wake-up call
to the warming climate's rapidly approaching effects.
Nobody
saw them coming. But that appears to be the way of a changing climate.
In April 1989 Margaret Thatcher, then Prime Minister, gave her Cabinet
a seminar on global warming at No 10 and one of the speakers was the
scientist and green guru James Lovelock. A reporter asked him
afterwards what would be the first signs of global warming. He replied:
"Surprises." Asked to explain, he said: "The hurricane of October 1987
was a surprise, wasn't it? There'll be more."
The
floods of 2007 were a surprise as well, and if Dr Lovelock is right,
there'll be more of them too. Welcome to the weather of the 21st
century.
The Flood of 1947
The
Great Flood of 1947, the previous worst inundation caused by rainfall
in Britain, swamped almost all of the rivers in the South, Midlands and
the North-east, submerged 700,000 acres of land and caused an estimated
£4bn worth of damage (in today's money).
The
deluge was predominantly caused by the rapid thaw of snow and ice that
had covered much of England after a particularly long and cold winter.
The weather patterns that caused the thaw also caused a number of
torrential downpours, exacerbating the flooding.
The
timing could not have been worse; Britain was still recovering from the
war. Rationing was harsh, deprivation widespread and the economy was
teetering. What made the catastrophe even more unfortunate was that it
occurred before the era of flood insurance.
The
flooding started across the South, from Somerset to Kent, as many
rivers broke their banks. By 14 March, parts of west and north-east
London had been submerged. The next day, the river Thames overflowed
its banks at Caversham, near Reading, and around the Lea Valley to the
east of London.
By
the end of the month, an estimated 100,000 homes had been flooded,
hundreds of thousands of people displaced and the year's crops largely
wiped out.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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