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Climate change: Small islands to get drier, putting 16 million at risk of water shortages
Climate
change will cause more islands to become dry and arid than previously
suggested. Over the next 35 years, 73% of small islands will face
freshwater shortages, potentially leaving 16 million people with a lack
of drinking water.
Previously, landmasses smaller than 200km2 were
not included in climate change models. Scientists had only been able to
estimate that half of small islands will become drier and half will
become wetter, as global warming progresses.
However,
researchers from University of Colorado developed a way to include
these islands in their model, by collecting climate data from the
atmosphere just above the islands themselves. These can then be used to
find an estimate for changes to precipitation and evaporation as the
climate changes. The research was published in Nature Climate Change. Their
results found that previous climate models underestimated the number of
islands which will experience aridity. Of the 80 global island groups
in the study, 73% were projected to evaporate more freshwater than
precipitated, by 2050. This means that 16 million more people could be
affected by a lack of freshwater within 35 years.
Not only will
this information give meteorologists a more accurate model for future
climate change, but it also shows that more people will ultimately be
affected by a lack of freshwater. A majority of the people living on
these islands use rainwater as their primary source of drinking water.
The
researchers say these results serve as an example of how much more
information we can obtain from detailed and accurate climate scenarios.
They say that preparations for freshwater management at these islands
should be considered now.
"Islands are already dealing with sea
level rise," said Kris Karnauskas, lead author of the research. "But
this shows that any rainwater they have is also vulnerable. The
atmosphere is getting thirstier, and would like more of that freshwater
back."
It said Daljinder Kaur gave birth to a baby boy at a fertility clinic in the northern Indian state of Haryana, following two years of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment. The report noted that though Kaur doesn’t possess any official paper to justify her age, but doctors at the hospital have registered her age as 72 years. It noted that if Kaur’s age is correct, that makes her one of the world’s oldest woman to become mother.
I believe that we were all sent here for a reason and that we all have significance in the world. I genuinely feel that we are all blessed with unique gifts. The expression of our gifts contributes to a cause greater than us.
The son of former Nigerian military head of state Yakubu Gowon is due to return to Nigeria after spending 22 years in a US prison after being convicted on drug-related charges. It is believed Musa Gowon was released from the Taft Correctional Facility Bakersfield, California, after US President Barack Obama granted him pardon earlier in November.
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