Climate change is 
one of the key factors 
that are causing 
not only flood but 
other forms of disasters. 
Due to the climate change, 
we are experiencing 
heavy rain, 
whose  intensity has gone up. 
Earlier the rainfall what 
we got within one week, 
now we are getting 
in one or two days.
Beneficent viewers, 
this is Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
This week 
we’ll discuss the horrific 
and often fatal effects 
of natural disasters 
caused by climate change.
Highly dangerous storms, 
floods, wildfires, 
heat waves, droughts, 
extreme cold spells, 
earthquakes 
and volcanic eruptions 
are taking place with 
increasing frequency and 
intensity across the globe. 
The number of victims 
and the steep economic 
losses are climbing. 
According to Munich Re, 
a re-insurer or a company 
that insures insurance firms, 
during the first half 
of 2011, 350 disastrous 
natural events occurred 
around the world, 
claiming approximately 
20,000 lives and 
costing US$265 billion.
This dollar figure is 
the highest ever recorded 
in a year in terms of 
property damage and 
2011 has not yet ended. 
The following are just 
some of the catastrophes 
that have occurred thus far.
TORNADOES 
AND CYCLONES
Climate change is believed 
to have aggravated 
an extreme, violent 
tornado outbreak 
in the United States 
that occurred between 
April 25 and 28, 2011. 
During this period 
an unprecedented 
336 twisters 
tore through midwestern, 
southern and northeastern 
states, as well as 
southern Ontario, Canada, 
causing approximately 
350 deaths.
The estimated damage 
came close to US$10 billion.
At the epicenter 
of the disasters 
was the city of Tuscaloosa, 
Alabama, USA 
where a tornado’s winds 
were measured at over 
418 kilometers an hour.
I ran into the house 
and told my brother 
and his girlfriend 
I told her to get her dog. 
And we all ran 
into the bathroom, 
and got in the tub 
and we were all 
sitting there just praying. 
 By the time I knew it -
(it) tore everything up, 
everything was just 
damaged, destroyed. 
It was terrifying. 
Only thing I know, 
I’m happy to be alive, 
blessed.
The United Nations 
Intergovernmental Panel 
on Climate Change 
has noted that elevated 
ocean temperatures 
resulting from 
a hotter planet have 
very serious consequences. 
Their Fourth Assessment 
Report states, 
“It is likely that 
future tropical cyclones 
(typhoons and hurricanes) 
will become 
more intense, with larger 
peak wind speeds and 
more heavy precipitation 
associated with ongoing 
increases of tropical 
sea surface temperatures.” 
In February 2011, 
Cyclone Yasi, 
a category-5 or 
the most powerful cyclone 
on the Australian Region 
Tropical Cyclone 
Intensity Scale, 
devastated parts 
of Queensland, Australia, 
forcing thousands 
to be evacuated as fierce 
winds and floodwaters 
caused extensive damage 
to buildings and homes.
It was the worst cyclone 
we’ve ever, ever seen. 
Our entire house, 
our property, 
our entire possessions 
all got taken in one minute 
when the cyclone took 
the roof off the house.
FLOODS
Human-induced 
global warming is also 
resulting in forceful rains 
and deadly flooding.
Respected University 
of Victoria, Canada 
climatologist 
Dr. Andrew Weaver 
has stated, “We should 
continue to expect 
increased flooding 
associated with increased 
extreme precipitation 
because of increasing 
atmospheric greenhouse gas. 
And we have no one 
to blame but ourselves.”
According to statistics 
from the Center 
for Research 
on the Epidemiology 
of Disasters,
hydrological calamities 
in 2010 were by far 
the most frequent 
in recorded history, 
being responsible 
for 56.1% of the year’s 
total disaster events. 
The number of victims 
was nearly 190 million, 
almost double 
the yearly average 
for the last decade.
In December 2010 
and early 2011 
the eastern states 
of Australia -- Queensland,
New South Wales, 
Victoria and 
northern Tasmania --
experienced flooding 
brought on by 
the La Niña effect but
with increased severity 
due to warmer 
ocean temperatures. 
In total, 
35 people perished, 
and 200,000 
were severely affected.
The economic damage 
was estimated 
at up to US$31 billion.
We’d been through 
numerous floods already 
and that day the water 
was about half a meter 
on the ground. 
And next thing, 
my mum said, 
“What’s that?” 
She’s looking out 
the kitchen window. 
We’re looking and looking, 
we didn’t know 
what it was 
and then when I realized 
what it was, I just said, 
“Everyone, 
in the lounge-room now!” 
I just thought 
we’re all going to die! 
The water kept coming 
and coming. 
It hit our place hard. 
All the debris just built up 
around the house. 
The flood hit us 
and the tsunami! 
And it came up and up 
and up and we just thought 
we were going 
to get washed away.
In January 2011, floods 
combined with landslides 
and mudslides ravaged 
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 
the worst cataclysm 
of its kind 
in the nation’s history. 
The catastrophe took the 
lives of over 900 people. 
The cost 
of rebuilding roads, 
homes and infrastructure 
is estimated 
to be US$1.2 billion.  
The flood was very sudden 
for those who did not know. 
In around 12 hours 
the river rose five meters. 
So it made families 
homeless very quickly. 
Many lost their belongings 
because there was 
no time to take it all out. 
The furniture was ruined, 
items were lost, 
and homes got damaged. 
We put homeless families 
in high schools, 
municipal gymnasiums. 
We have to have vehicles 
to move people, then 
we have to have canoes 
because there are times 
vehicles can’t reach it. 
People are taken by canoe.
On the world’s 
other continents, 
floods have also been 
disturbingly commonplace.
This year, 
there is a lot more water 
than any other year. 
It’s got to be related 
to global warming. 
There is no water 
for drinking or for usage. 
The tap water is gone. 
The electricity is out. 
This place has never 
been flooded; 
for several hundred years 
it hasn’t been flooded. 
If only we could put 
our possessions 
at higher places. 
Who knew the flood 
would come all of a sudden; 
there was no way, 
it couldn’t be saved. 
It was very devastating 
as you could see from 
the pictures on television. 
From the northern region, 
the entire Central Gonja 
district (Ghana) 
was submerged. 
If you come 
to the southern area, 
the Volta Region, 
it was very devastating. 
In Agona Swedru (Ghana), 
a lot of structures, 
bridges were washed away. 
Over 2,000 people 
were affected. 
WILDFIRES 
Uncontrollable wildfires 
are a frightening 
phenomenon on the rise. 
In May 2011, raging fires 
burned approximately 
2,200 square kilometers 
of forests in Arizona, USA.
Recorded as being 
the largest blaze 
in the state’s history, 
it demolished hundreds 
of homes and caused 
US$109 million in damage.
In Russia, following 
2010’s unprecedented 
forest fire outbreaks, 
more severe havoc 
struck the nation. 
At the end of July 2011, 
fires had burned in 
more than 16,000 locations 
across Russia, 
with a total of 
10,600 square kilometers 
of land charred.
The most harmful fires 
struck the territories 
of Yakutia, Komi, 
Karelia, Khabarovsk, 
Krasnoyarsk, 
as well as the Vologda 
and Arkhangelsk regions.
DROUGHT
Climate change expert 
Dr. Richard Seager, 
a research professor 
at Columbia University, 
USA has noted: “The term 
‘global warming’ 
does not do justice 
to the climatic changes 
the world will experience 
in coming decades.  
Some of the 
worst disruptions we face 
will involve water, 
not just temperature.”
Drought, or the prolonged 
lack of precipitation, 
leads to substantial 
agricultural losses, 
huge shortages 
of drinking water 
and famine. 
More than 12-million 
residents of Djibouti, 
Ethiopia, Kenya 
and Somalia are currently 
suffering enormously 
from famine 
due to severe drought.
This figure has risen 38% 
since March 2011.
In addition, 
drought is causing 
substantial property loss 
through soil subsidence, 
or sinking land, 
particularly in Europe. 
Unbalanced rainfall 
and evaporation 
change soil moisture, 
making it swell 
and shrink repeatedly, 
leading to 
destructive collapse. 
In France alone, 
subsidence-related damage 
has increased by 50% 
over the last 20 years, 
costing the affected regions 
an average of 
€340 million annually. 
These events 
will inevitably grow 
in frequency due to 
an increasingly hot planet.
EXTREME COLD
Computer modeling 
done by US government 
researchers demonstrated 
that climate change 
will lead to longer and 
more extreme cold spells 
at the end of the century. 
However, 
the impact of unnaturally 
frigid temperatures 
can be seen right now. 
One such event affected 
the tropical nation 
of Bangladesh 
in early January 2011, 
resulting in 
at least 11 fatalities 
due to the abnormally 
chilly conditions. 
Travel and other daily 
activities were disrupted, 
and children and the elderly 
particularly suffered 
due to the adverse weather.
Nageswari Upazila as 
well as Kurigram District 
is situated in a region 
around the foot 
of the Himalayas. 
People are very poor here. 
During winter a man has 
nothing but a single quilt 
to protect him. 
This is the case 
for most of the people. 
So these people suffer a lot 
during winter 
and a number of people 
die from cold each year.
EARTHQUAKES AND 
VOLCANIC ACTIVITY
The rapid melting 
of glaciers and ice sheets 
due to global warming 
has a rebound effect 
on the Earth’s crust, 
meaning the crust rises 
to its original position, 
provoking earthquakes 
and volcanic eruptions.
In March 2011, 
a massive 9.0-magnitude 
earthquake centered off 
the northeastern coast 
of Japan and 
accompanying tsunami 
left approximately 
15,600 dead, 
5,700 injured and 
close to 6,000 missing.
The ruinous temblor 
was the world’s 
fourth strongest 
since 1900.
In an instant, I witnessed 
electric wires, houses, 
and other various things 
being swept away 
at one blow. 
Not only the mere sight of 
the tsunami was terrible, 
but the sound was 
extremely fearful. 
On February 22, 2011, 
New Zealand's 
second most populous city, 
Christchurch, was rocked 
by the most destructive 
of the more than 
7,400 aftershocks 
that followed the 
7.1 magnitude earthquake 
that struck the region 
in September 2010. 
The February event, 
which was 
a 6.3 magnitude quake, 
sent people running 
in panic and caused 
a total of 181 deaths.
This whole community 
over here still doesn’t 
have fresh, clean water, 
sewage, or any power, 
so as you can appreciate, 
cooking and the basic 
needs are very essential. 
On June 13, 2011, 
another aftershock of 
magnitude 6.3 hit the city, 
causing additional damage.
Mount Bulusan 
in Sorsogon Province, 
the Philippines 
erupted in February 2011, 
ejecting a plume of ash 
up to two kilometers high 
and forcing over 3,600 
families to be evacuated 
from their homes 
in an effort 
to ensure their safety.
The effects of this ash 
fall to the livelihood 
of the people are too great. 
How could they maintain 
their subsistence, 
since their source of living 
is almost destroyed 
by these ashes? 
Their source 
of drinking water, 
of course, is also affected.
The natural disasters 
we’ve examined today 
are just a fraction 
of the events that have 
occurred thus far in 2011. 
Is there anything 
that can be done 
about the Earth’s 
distress signals?  Yes. 
We can take steps now 
to minimize 
and even eliminate 
future calamities. 
Following an organic, 
plant-based diet 
is the simplest 
and quickest way 
to stop the effects 
of climate change. 
A wholesale, worldwide 
adoption of this lifestyle 
would produce 
a highly beneficial, 
cooling effect on Earth and 
end the enormous levels 
of methane and other 
toxic greenhouse gases 
being produced 
by the environmentally 
destructive
animal product industries, 
restoring balance 
to our planetary home.
Eco-conscious viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
on today’s program. 
May the guidance 
of Providence always be 
with every being.