Hurricanes, floods show risks of climate change: UN
By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
OSLO (Reuters) - Atlantic hurricanes and floods in India are reminders of the risks of ever more extreme weather linked to a changing climate, the head of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) said on Monday.
Achim Steiner said that more damaging weather extremes were in line with forecasts by the U.N. Climate Panel. He urged governments to stick to a timetable meant to end in December 2009 with a new U.N. pact to fight global warming.
"These natural disasters do reflect a pattern of change that is in line with projections" by experts on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), he told Reuters in a telephone interview from Geneva.
"As you watch the hurricane season in the Atlantic, as we watch the cyclones and the flood events in India, clearly we have more reason than ever to be concerned about the unfolding of patterns that the IPCC has forecast," he said.
He said it was impossible to link individual weather events, such as Hurricane Gustav battering the U.S. Gulf Coast on Monday, to climate change stoked by human activities led by use of fossil fuels.
But they match patterns forecast by the IPCC, which shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore. The IPCC is marking its 20th anniversary in Geneva this week.
GUSTAV
Gustav slammed ashore on the U.S. Gulf Coast just west of New Orleans on Monday, a new blow to the city devastated by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Gustav weakened to a category 1, the lowest on a five-point scale. Continued...

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