UNITED NATIONS - Extreme weather sparked by
climate change is "the new normal" and Superstorm Sandy that ravaged the
U.S. Northeast is a lesson the world must pursue more environmentally
friendly policies, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Friday.
The United Nations headquarters closed for three days when former
hurricane Sandy slammed the Northeast on Oct. 29 as a rare hybrid
superstorm, killing at least 121 people, swamping seaside towns and
leaving millions without power.
"We all know the
difficulties in attributing any single storm to climate change. But we
also know this: extreme weather due to climate change is the new
normal," Ban told the 193-member U.N. General Assembly.
"This may be an uncomfortable truth, but it is one we ignore at our
peril. The world's best scientists have been sounding the alarm for many
years," he said. "There can be no looking away, no persisting with
business as usual ... This should be one of the main lessons of
Hurricane Sandy."
New York City Mayor Michael
Bloomberg endorsed President Barack Obama for a second term after Sandy
struck, citing Obama's record on climate change and saying he believed
the Democrat would adopt more policies to curb greenhouse gases in a
second term. Obama won re-election on Tuesday.
The head of U.N. security, Gregory Starr, said last week that U.N.
headquarters sustained severe damage when Sandy produced heavy flooding
in basement levels of the world body's Manhattan complex along the East
River. Flood damage forced the relocation of a U.N. Security Council
meeting on Somalia last week from its normal chambers to a temporary
building inside the U.N. campus.
U.N.
delegations sharply criticized the United Nations' management on Monday
for an almost "total breakdown in communications" with the world body's
member states after superstorm Sandy struck.
"Our global services were provided without interruption," said Ban.
"However, it is clear that in focusing so much on operations and
infrastructure, we fell short when it came to communications."
"We learned that too many email addresses were out of date or otherwise
incorrect," he said. "And in the broadest sense, we should have done
more to update member states, staff alike and wider audience at large
about the impact and implications of the storm."
Michael Adlerstein, who heads a $1.9 billion renovation of the United
Nations due to be completed in 2013, has said Sandy would not delay the
overhaul of the U.N. complex. — Reuters
0 comments:
Post a Comment