Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.English
Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00In other news, French President Emmanuel Macron is to head to Mayotte this week,
00:03where he's set to declare a day of national mourning. An estimated 70% of the population
00:09of this tiny French territory is thought to have been affected by the worst cyclone
00:14to hit the country in nearly a century. Rescue workers are struggling to reach survivors
00:21in France's poorest overseas department. Hundreds, if not thousands, of people are
00:26thought to have been killed, with the French government now imposing a night-time curfew.
00:30Cara Scarlan reports.
00:34It's an exceptional operation for exceptional circumstances. This A400M plane is one of
00:41several taking part in an air bridge to transport crucial personnel and humanitarian aid from
00:47Reunion to Mayotte. Before they fly to the disaster zone, civil security soldiers are
00:52briefed on their mission. Our primary objective is to deploy the first water production site on
00:58Petite Terre. Given the enormous needs in Mayotte, the mission is shaping up to be a long one.
01:06Two months, three months, four months, it's possible. The task is immense.
01:11The cyclone was of an unprecedented scale.
01:15Reunion, another French territory in the Indian Ocean, is about 1,400 kilometres from Mayotte.
01:21It takes two to three hours to reach the disaster zone by plane and up to four days by boat.
01:27The Marion Dufresne, a scientific exploration ship, will also deliver supplies. However,
01:34authorities say they're experiencing a cluster log, meaning the number of trips isn't enough
01:39to deliver all the aid that's available. It's the case for these Red Cross pallets that are
01:43waiting at a warehouse in Reunion. The site director hopes they can leave this week,
01:48but there are no guarantees.
01:50Here, we have plastic sheets to cover the roofs of houses. We also have kits for rebuilding homes,
01:59so we can get back to work on temporary shelters.
02:04Humanitarian aid is also being prepared in mainland France.
02:08These firefighters are gathering the material needed to construct a field hospital.
02:14Given the situation on the ground, we're going to take in all the patients in intensive care.
02:18With trips set to ramp up in the coming days, hundreds of tonnes of material is
02:22expected to make its way from Reunion and mainland France to Mayotte.
02:28Joining me now is Charlie Gardner from the Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology
02:32at University of Kent. Thank you so much for your time.
02:35What made this cyclone so incredibly powerful?
02:40Well, there has been, as a result of climate change, which is driven by burning fossil fuels,
02:46there's been incredible heat throughout the Western Indian Ocean over the course of this year.
02:53And when there's more heat in the water, that drives, that puts much more energy into weather
02:59systems. It puts much more humidity into the atmosphere. And so, although we don't have
03:05data yet, the attribution studies yet, that show that this particular storm was driven
03:10by climate change, we do know that climate change caused the cyclone to erupt.
03:14We do know that climate change causes a much greater intensity of tropical storms.
03:20And it means that very intense tropical storms like this one become much more frequent.
03:24So it's happening, and this has happened because of burning fossil fuels primarily.
03:30But it's, we also know that the eye of this cyclone passed over the island itself,
03:35which meant that as a result, the danger that it posed was far more amplified.
03:42This is exactly right. And what this tragic example shows is that the impacts of climate
03:49change aren't just about the severity of the extreme weather. They're also about
03:55our resilience as human societies and our capacity to withstand this weather. Now,
04:01Mayotte is one of the poorest islands in the world, as we're seeing on our images now.
04:08The, much of the infrastructure, including people's homes, just isn't built to withstand
04:15storms of this intensity. So yes, the impacts we're seeing are the combined result of the storm
04:20itself. And the fact that our human societies just aren't prepared to deal with this sort of
04:27extreme weather. And that's a very, that has really important implications. Up till now,
04:32the discussion about how to respond to climate change has been rightly very focused on mitigating
04:39the problem, stopping it getting worse. In other words, getting off fossil fuels and stopping
04:44destroying nature as fast as we can. What this storm and other things show is that we also need
04:50to prepare ourselves in a second way. We need to adapt to the changes that are coming. And you know,
04:54this isn't a future problem. This is happening right now. And there are impacts that we simply
05:00cannot avoid. So whilst we do need to increase the focus on decarbonisation, we also need to
05:08rapidly redouble our efforts on preparedness and adapting to these impacts that are now inevitable.
05:16And as you pointed out, Charlie, this is France's poorest territory. Many of those people living in
05:23shanty towns and the devastation caused by this cyclone surely must be a wake-up call for
05:30authorities, as you pointed out, to do more for people impacted by climate change. But what exactly
05:35needs to be done? Well, we need to do two things. We need to rapidly transition away from burning
05:45fossil fuels as our main energy source. And we need to stop destroying nature through agriculture,
05:52primarily through the production of meat. Now, as you pointed out, there is a huge inequality
06:00issue here. There's a huge justice issue here. The people who are suffering on the front lines
06:06in Mayotte and elsewhere are some of the smallest contributors to this problem. It's some of the
06:15policies of the French government and other governments of industrialised nations, the
06:19policies of French fossil fuel companies like Total and the high carbon lifestyles of people
06:28on mainland France that are driving this problem, and not the people of Mayotte. So I do really hope
06:36that you're correct that this does serve as a wake-up call, because of course the people in
06:41Mayotte do not have the power to change this situation for themselves. It's only those in
06:48Europe and industrialised countries that really have that power. Charlie Gardner, we're going to
06:53have to leave it there. Thank you so much. Thank you.