Booming coastal cities at risk from climate change

Politics & Current Affairs

Top politics and current affairs news for April 10, 2017. Part of the daily The China Projectย news roundup "Anti-corruption reality TV."

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un applauds during a military parade marking the 105th birth anniversary of the country's founding father, Kim Il Sung, in Pyongyang April 15, 2017. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

A 2016 World Bank report saidย (see page 84) that Guangzhou is the world city that faces the most serious economic risks from climate change, while Shenzhen is ranked 10th. On the weekend, the New York Timesย published a reportย (paywall) on the growing threat faced by Chinaโ€™s southern coastal boom cities from floods and rising waters. In a downpour in May 2014, in the manufacturing hub of Dongguan, โ€œmore than 100 factories and shops were inundatedโ€ as โ€œwater climbed knee-high in 20 minutes.โ€ At the same time in nearby Guangzhou, โ€œhelicopters and a fleet of 80 boats had to be sent to rescue trapped residents,โ€ while โ€œtens of thousands lost their homes, and 53 square miles of nearby farmland were ruined.โ€ The Timesย notes that โ€œresearchers say there is abundant evidence that the effects of climate change can already be seen โ€” in higher water levels, increasing temperatures and ever-more severe storms.โ€