Institute of Physics
PR07 (09)
Wed, 11 March 2009
Climate change concerns like melting icecaps, increased desertification, loss of coral reefs and the extinction of species like polar bears can seem a distant concern in our everyday lives. Little attention, however, has been paid to the likelihood of increased bills, through tax and insurance charges, that will be incurred as the UK climate changes.
Alistair Hunt, a researcher at the University of Bath, will be addressing scientists this week at the international Climate Change Congress being held in Copenhagen to present research which shows that the cost of climate change is going to be felt much closer to home than many expect. Alistair’s talk is one of many described in the complete online abstract book of the congress, published in the IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science.
Working with the UK Climate Impacts Programme (UKCIP), Alistair has calculated the projected cost increases that would be incurred with an increased burden on National Health Service resources during hotter summers; the effect that hotter and drier summers will have on the rate of property subsidence; the maintenance costs of public lawns and the cost of maintaining climate damage-induced highways.
As Alistair says, “Through isolating particular consequences of extreme weather fluctuations, projected to become more frequent such as the hotter summers of both 1995 and 2003, and assessing the effect that these weather fluctuations had on local resources, we are helping businesses, councils and individuals to prepare for the future.”
The hot summers of 1995 and 2003 are used to inform a number of the case studies of likely trends associated with climate change, as experts predict that the once-a-century temperatures, reached in 2003’s summer, become regular English summer temperatures. Changes in temperature and rainfall averages also result in climate change costs.
The case studies look ahead 90 years and predict that the cost of treating people with heat-related illnesses will increase anything between five and nine-fold for primary care trusts; the increased insurance costs associated with property subsidence during arid summers will increase anything between four and 13-fold; and that both public lawn and road maintenance will see expensive hikes too.
Dr Johanna Schwarz, Editor of IOP Publishing’s Earth and Environmental Science Conference Series, said, “Climate change is going to affect all of us and Alistair’s presentation in Copenhagen is a timely reminder that it is not just tropical islanders or others in less moderate climate zones that need to adapt.”
The case studies explore different adaptive measures, such as public health campaigns to provide advice about how to stay cool during hot summers, which could over the long-term reduce the health costs, and also looks at weather patterns that could lead to savings, such as the need for less road-grit during warmer winters, but the studies still forecast financial hikes that will bring the expense of climate change much closer to home.
Alistair said, “While the case studies might appear parochial and only reflect the concern of particular stakeholders such as the National Trust or the Association of British Insurers, the hike in costs will be shared, climate change will affect all of our wallets.”
Roger Street, Technical Director at the UK Climate Impacts Programme, said, “Understanding the costs of impacts and adaptation is an important aspect of defining and implementing a viable adaptation strategy and its evolving adaptation measures. It is essential that we continue to provide up-to-date and supportive guidance that meets the needs of users towards identifying the costs and benefits.”
Notes to editors:
Contact
For further information, contact IOP Press Officer, Joe Winters:
Tel: 020 7470 4815
Mobile: 07946 321473
E-mail: joseph.winters@iop.org
Online abstract book from the Climate Change Congress
2. For a complete selection of abstracts from the Climate Change Congress, please go to www.iop.org/EJ/volume/1755-1315/6.
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science (EES)
3. EES is an open access proceedings service based on IOP Publishing’s open access proceedings in physics. EES is the latest addition to our portfolio of environmental publications and services: the community web site environmentalresearchweb.org and the open access journal Environmental Research Letters. Go to http://conferenceseries.iop.org/ees.
Environmentalresearchweb.org’s blog from the Climate Change Congress
4. IOP Publishing’s community website will be hosting a real-time blog from the three-day Climate Change Congress. To keep up-to-speed with developments at the Congress, go to http://environmentalresearchweb.org/cws/home.
UK Climate Impacts Programme
5. The UK Climate Impacts Programme (UKCIP) helps organisations to adapt to inevitable climate change. Since 1997 UKCIP has been working with the public, private and voluntary sectors to assess how a changing climate will affect construction, working practices, demand for goods and services, biodiversity, service delivery, health and more. For further information, go to http://www.ukcip.org.uk/ or call Communications Officer, Kay Jenkinson, on 01865 285717.
Climate Change Congress: Global Risks, Challenges and Decisions
6. The University of Copenhagen is hosting an international scientific congress on climate change under the heading "Climate Change: Global Risks, Challenges and Decisions", 10-12 March 2009 in Copenhagen, Denmark. The congress is organised in cooperation with nine other universities in the International Alliance of Research Universities (IARU). The congress takes place in the run-up to the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP-15) in Copenhagen in November-December 2009. All findings will be compiled in a book on climate change, and an executive summary with the main findings will be handed over to policy makers at the COP15. For further information, go to http://climatecongress.ku.dk/about/.
The Institute of Physics
7. The Institute of Physics is a scientific membership organisation devoted to increasing the understanding and application of physics. It has an extensive worldwide membership (currently around 34 000) and is a leading communicator of physics with all audiences from specialists through government to the general public. Its publishing company, IOP Publishing, is a world leader in scientific publishing and the electronic dissemination of physics. Go to www.iop.org.
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