A rising death toll, the catastrophic flooding and destruction of
entire neighborhoods, and billions of dollars in property damage. The
impact of Hurricane Sandy, which hit the East Coast earlier this week,
will be felt for years, both in the United States and in the Caribbean
region where it had earlier killed more than 70 people.
Sandy is being called the "Storm of the Century" but floods,
droughts, heat waves and storms are only expected to get worse — with
every part of the world facing deadlier and costlier weather disasters.
Much of the world has experienced devastating weather conditions this
year. Across eastern and western Africa, a one-two punch of severe
drought followed by torrential rains resulted in flash flooding and the
deaths and displacement of hundreds of thousands. Drought was also the
worst it's been in a quarter century in the United States, shriveling
corn crops and boosting prices worldwide. And over the last week,
typhoon Son-Tinh has wreaked havoc on Southeast Asia, killing dozens and
damaging homes and crops.
So what's causing these extreme weather events and their widespread
devastation? A special report issued earlier this year by the IPCC — the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change — points to a combination of
human-caused global warming, shifts in population, and poverty. And
though political wrangling over global warming continues in the United
States, 7 in 10 Americans now believe in the science behind climate
change and how it can alter global weather conditions.
This week, Christiane discusses these weather extremes with Michael
Oppenheimer, a professor at Princeton University. He is also one of the
authors of the IPCC report.
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