Indo Pak nuclear war would set off global
famine - study
DEC 11 – A nuclear war between India
and Pakistan would set off a global famine that could kill two billion people
and effectively end human civilization, a study said Tuesday.
Even if limited in scope, a conflict
with nuclear weapons would wreak havoc in the atmosphere and devastate crop
yields, with the effects multiplied as global food markets went into turmoil,
the report said.
The Nobel Peace Prize-winning
International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War and Physicians for
Social Responsibility released an initial peer-reviewed study in April 2012
that predicted a nuclear famine could kill more than a billion people.
In a second edition, the groups said
they widely underestimated the impact in China and calculated that the world’s
most populous country would face severe food insecurity.
“A billion people dead in the
developing world is obviously a catastrophe unparalleled in human history. But
then if you add to that the possibility of another 1.3 billion people in China
being at risk, we are entering something that is clearly the end of
civilization,” said Ira Helfand, the report’s author.
Helfand said that the study looked at
India and Pakistan due to the longstanding tensions between the nuclear-armed
states, which have fought three full-fledged wars since independence and
partition in 1947.
But Helfand said that the planet
would expect a similar apocalyptic impact from any limited nuclear war. Modern
nuclear weapons are far more powerful than the US bombs that killed more than
200,000 people in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945.
“With a large war between the United
States and Russia, we are talking about the possible, not certain, but
possible, extinction of the human race.
“In this kind of war, biologically
there are going to be people surviving somewhere on the planet but the chaos
that would result from this will dwarf anything we’ve ever seen,” Helfand said.
The study said that the black carbon
aerosol particles kicked into the atmosphere by a South Asian nuclear war would
reduce US corn and soybean production by around 10 percent over a decade.
The particles would also reduce
China’s rice production by an average of 21 percent over four years and by
another 10 percent over the following six years.
The updated study also found severe
effects on China’s wheat, which is vital to the country despite its association
with rice.
China’s wheat production would plunge
by 50 per cent the first year after the nuclear war and would still be 31 per
cent below baseline a decade later, it said.
The study said it was impossible to
estimate the exact impact of nuclear war. He called for further research,
voicing alarm that policymakers in nuclear powers were not looking more
thoroughly at the idea of a nuclear famine.
But he said, ultimately, the only
answer was the abolition of nuclear weapons.
“This is a disaster so massive in
scale that really no preparation is possible. We must prevent this,” he said.
President Barack Obama pledged in
2009 to work toward abolition but said that the United States would keep
nuclear weapons so long as others exist.
Nine countries are believed to
possess nuclear weapons, with Russia and the United States holding the vast
majority. (AFP)
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nuclear war would set off global famine: study
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