Site of Glasgow climate talks has its own history of extreme weather

The COP26 summit kicks off right in the heart of Scotland's flood season. PHOTO: AFP

GLASGOW (BLOOMBERG) - The last time the river running through the Scottish city of Glasgow overflowed its banks with deadly results occurred nearly three decades ago.

Days of torrential rain reached the breaking point just two weeks before Christmas 1994, and two people died in floods that swamped the city's SEC Centre and caused more than £100 million (S$186 million) in property damage.

Back then, Mr James Curran oversaw flood-warning systems across the region. As the storm intensified, he was dispatched to the basement of a local police station to help coordinate the emergency response, relaying readings from river and tidal gauges to rescue workers. It caused disruptions, such as the cancellation of a sold-out concert by rock star Meatloaf at the SEC Centre.

That since-renovated venue in the centre of Glasgow - now named the Ovo Hydro - will welcome world leaders and thousands of attendees for a crucial United Nations summit on climate change in November.

The COP26 summit kicks off right in the heart of Scotland's flood season. Negotiators could face rainy conditions that swell the River Clyde, which sluices through the city, to potentially dangerous levels.

"We're in uncharted territory with the frequency and severity of floods we're experiencing now," says Mr Curran. Today, he chairs Climate Ready Clyde, a group that is helping the region better prepare for the impacts of global warming.

"There's no question that the risk across all potential flooding areas in Glasgow city region will escalate in the decades to come."

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency estimates that about 170,000 people in and around Glasgow face risks from flooding, a number that is set to rise about 30 per cent by the 2080s. Damage from floods will cost the region about £100 million a year by mid-century.

"There's tonnes of flood exposure," said Ms Beth Tellman, chief science officer at flood monitoring start-up Cloud to Street. "It's already a risky country and will remain a risky country."

Heightened flood risk has become a global phenomenon. Over the past few decades, Scotland has seen more heavy downpours, accelerating sea-level rise and cutting the number of days with frost and snow cover.

Glasgow received 125 per cent its average annual rainfall last year. Torrential rain this August submerged one street under more than 1m of water.

It remains unlikely flood conditions will be repeated this November, just as climate talks are under way in Glasgow. But the city still faces dangers from the altered climate.

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Deluges of water can pool up in the streets with nowhere to go. Rivers can overflow. Coastal flooding in the region has also become a more pronounced risk as sea levels rise.

Heightened flood risk is now a global phenomenon, with average temperatures worldwide more than 1.1 deg C above pre-industrial levels. Northern Scotland's annual mean sea surface temperature has increased as much as 0.24 deg C per decade since 1990.

While Britain has one of the world's most aggressive targets to decarbonise its economy, the country's Climate Change Committee has warned that not enough is being done to protect British residents from the impacts of warming temperatures.

Mr Curran is among those working to change that in Glasgow. The climate-adaptation plan his team is developing is part of a European Union effort to provide examples that local governments across the continent can learn from.

Many of the solutions for flooding, such as building up depleted peatlands, turning sealed culverts into open waterways, and building up park space, aim to not only store more water during periods of intense rain but also make the city a more pleasant place to live.

"The idea is to have the whole city be more spongy," says Mr David Harley, head of water and planning at the Scottish Environment Protection Agency.

"It's the difference between a functional, unhealthy, dangerous place in the long term and one that can thrive and survive and be successful in a changing climate."

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