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Athens is growing and getting hotter. |
The storied
Mediterranean faces climate change
By Nicole Itano |
Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
ATHENS - From ancient Egypt to Rome, the
fertile Mediterranean has sustained great empires for millenniums.
But modern development is rapidly turning the cradle of Western
civilization into a dry and inhospitable place, its coasts covered
in hotels and many of its unique species driven to extinction.
In the past 30 years, coastal populations
have grown some 50 percent. Coastal cities have doubled. Tourism has
exploded: By 2025, 312 million tourists will visit each year. Water
usage is twice that of 1950. More than 100 species are endangered.
Now, climate change is exacerbating the
situation.
The region's climate may already be changing
faster than projected. In June, a recording station in Athens
measured the highest temperature ever recorded there, nearly 113
degrees Fahrenheit.
Overall, temperatures for the summer months
were about 5 degrees warmer than average. Months passed without
rain. Then deadly fires swept across the country, killing at least
67 people and scorching some 650,000 acres of land.
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Parnitha Mountain: Fires burned in the mountains around Athens this summer, destroying forests that help keep
the city cooler. Illegal homes are starting to spring up among the ashes. This summer was the hottest on record -
attributable to global warming, decreased rainfall, overbuilding and drought. |
The abnormal weather in 2007 is not proof
that climate change is here, scientists say, but it is a strong
indicator. And it's a taste of what's likely to come if the world
continues to spew greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
"You can say it was probably an ordinary
summer of the years to come," says Christos Giannakopoulos, a
researcher at the National Observatory of Athens and contributor to
the UN-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
"This [kind of] summer still will not happen every one or every two
years. But in the future, this ... might happen every year."
Greece was not the only Mediterranean country
to experience extreme weather last summer.
In Turkey, heat and drought caused major crop
failures and forced Ankara to ration city water. By autumn, the
water supplies in Cyprus's reservoirs had dwindled to 9 percent of
capacity. Fires raged across Spain, Italy, Croatia, and Algeria in
one of the worst seasons since the European Union began tracking in
the 1980s.
Major meeting this week
This week, the 22 signatories of the 1976
Barcelona Convention, an agreement to protect the Mediterranean, are
meeting in Almeria, Spain. Despite international efforts, however,
the pace of environmental destruction in the Mediterranean has
quickened.
Climate change adds a new threat to the list.
The Nobel-prizewinning IPCC identified the Mediterranean – already
hot and short of water – as one of the world's regions most
vulnerable to global warming.
A new report by the UN Environment Program
(UNEP) highlights the sea's eastern and southern shores as potential
hot spots where climate change could turn the scramble for scarce
resources nto sources of conflict, as well as increase the pace of
illegal migration.
On a political level, the urgency of the
Mediterranean's environmental situation has been understood for at
least three decades. In 1975, just three years after the creation of
the UNEP, the countries bordering the sea created the Mediterranean
Action Plan and a year later signed the Barcelona Convention,
committing themselves to regional environmental cooperation. It was
the first such agreement of its kind in the world.
Over the years, the convention – expanded in
1995 to coastal areas – has served as the framework for a number of
environmental initiatives – to reduce land-based pollution, for
example – as well as an important foundation for regional
cooperation. This week, ministers from the 22 Barcelona Convention
countries and territories will hold their biannual meeting where
they are expected to discuss climate change and agree to new
regulations on coastal development.
The convention has often broken new ground on
environmental cooperation, creating a model that has been used in
other parts of the world. But it also illustrates how difficult
transforming concern into effective action can be.
"Barcelona is one of the oldest conventions
in the world and it helped create an awareness that there was a
common good to protect," says François Simard, a Mediterranean
researcher with the World Conservation Union (IUCN). "It's true that
one can say it's a huge amount of energy that is going into that
convention and the results are not enough. But without the Barcelona
Convention, I'm sure things would be much worse."
Although climate models disagree on details,
such as by exactly how many degrees average temperatures will rise
and how quickly, they all foresee a similar future for the region.
By the end of the century, much of the Mediterranean may too hot in
the summer for tourists to sun on its beaches and too dry for many
crops now grown there. Heat waves will become commonplace, and
water, already scarce, will become more so. According to the IPCC,
the average summer temperature on the North African coast could be
16 degrees hotter, while in southern Europe summer rainfall could
decline by as much as 80 percent. The sea level could rise by 10 to
12 inches.
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Dr. Alexios Paizis, a mechanical engineer with Sol Energy Hellas, shows off the heating and cooling system that
circulates water in the walls of a prototype building that has been designed to save 95% of normal energy demand.
The building is not only eco friendly, it also will save money on energy after about 11 years. |
Already there are signs that warming is
occurring – and that it may be happening in the Mediterranean faster
than elsewhere. Data from the National Observatory of Athens show
that Greece is already in the midst of a warming period that has
lasted more than 15 years. Between 1992 and 2001, the temperature in
Athens increased by between 3.6 and 5.4 degrees.
Anecdotal evidence also suggest that the
sea's waters may be warming, further threatening the sea's
biodiversity, which is already under threat from fishing and
development. Hundreds of invasive species, like algae and fish that
crossed through the Suez Canal from the Red Sea, have moved in. In
other places, native species like coral and sea sponges are
struggling to survive in warmer waters or are being driven out by
new arrivals.
"The landscape of some areas has completely
changed," says Richardo Aguilar, director of research for Europe for
the nongovernmental group Oceana. "But most people ... are just
going to the beach, they cannot see what's happening inside the
sea."
The drought and devastating fires experienced
in 2007, say environmental activists in the region, has started to
convince many who once saw climate change as a remote threat that it
is a reality.
"People are starting to feel that climate
change, global warming, is beginning to affect their lives," said
Daphne Mavrogiorgos, an activist at the Hellenic Society for the
Protection of the Environment and Cultural Heritage. "There's a long
way to go, but it's a start."
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