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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Europe drought leading to more property damage: study
by Staff Writers
Zurich (AFP) July 4, 2011

Increasing occurences of drought have led to a jump in European insurance claims for damage to homes owing to subsiding soil, a study by reinsurer Swiss Re and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology said on Monday.

With temperatures set to rise in coming years and less regular rainfall amid climate change, future potential losses from soil movements are expected to increase in some areas by over 50 percent for the period 2021 to 2040 compared to today, said the study.

"A long and intense dry spell can lower the ground so much that it creates fissures in the earth and tears apart the foundations of houses, bridges, industrial sites and other structures," explained the research.

"In the worst case, shifting soil can cause whole buildings to collapse," it said.

Large swathes of France, Britain, Germany as well as northern Spain are already now showing jumps of more than 50 percent in potential claims compared to the period 1951 to 1970.

"In France alone, economic losses from soil subsidence have risen by over 50 percent since 1990, amounting to an average of 340 million euros ($494 million) a year," said the study.

"Climate change will further increase the frequency and intensity of drought-induced soil subsidence -- and with it the risk of future damage to properties.

"Large parts of Europe will experience more sporadic rainfall and drier soils, and as a result face far greater losses from shifting soil," it warned.




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Worst drought in 60 years hits 10 million in Horn of Africa
Geneva (AFP) June 28, 2011
Ten million people in the Horn of Africa have been hit by the worst drought in 60 years, with some areas on the verge of famine and thousands on the march in seach of food and water, the UN said Tuesday. A poor rainy season coupled with rising food prices have led to severe food shortages in countries including Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and Uganda. Cattle and sheep are dying at ... read more


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