Climate disasters may double in the next two decades unless the world cuts its carbon dioxide emissions, the Asian Development Bank said Friday, with "high risk" nations in Asia set to be hard hit.
Two days before a world climate summit opens in Paris, the Manila-based lender said deadlier storms, floods and heat waves were linked to rising global temperatures, adding to a growing chorus on the catastrophic effects of climate change.
The report, which looked at disasters from 1970 to 2013, said if carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere continued to rise at an annual rate of two parts per million, the frequency of climate disasters could double in 17 years.
This meant the average country could experience 1.55 climate disasters per year, compared to the current average of 0.775, the study added.
It said three "high risk" countries -- the Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand -- would be particularly affected, citing Super Typhoon Haiyan in 2013, which left 7,350 people dead or missing after it wiped out poor fishing communities in the Philippines' central islands.
"Any further increases in CO2 (carbon dioxide) would hit these countries hard," the ADB said.
Also at risk were emerging nations' economic growth rates, the bank added, stressing that tackling climate change would boost prosperity levels.
The ADB, a Japan-led institution modelled on the World Bank, said the global damage bill from natural disasters was steadily rising, with the most recent decade, 2005-2014, costing some $142 billion, up from $36 billion during 1985-1994.
It said climate-related disasters had cut into the growth rates of Australia, China, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam and the trend was "set to worsen". Countries should invest in a shift from fossil fuels to renewable energy to reverse this, it said.
"Policymakers and economic advisors have long held the view that climate action is a drain on economic growth," the ADB's Vinod Thomas, a co-author of the study, said.
"But the reality is the opposite: the vast damage from climate-related disasters is an increasing obstacle to economic growth and well-being."
The goal of the Paris summit is to negotiate a pact to keep global warming below two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial levels.
The Paris meeting represents the first bid for a truly global climate rescue pact since the chaotic 2009 summit in Copenhagen ended in disappointment.
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