In case you missed it, the Intergovernmental Panel on ClimateChange, IPCC, released their sixth report. The scientists find that:
- Climate Change is already affecting ecosystems globally
- The planet is being impacted unevenly
- There is already a 1.5 degree Celsius of warming baked into the future by past greenhouse gas emissions no matter how much countries cut emissions now.
- Despite pledges made in Glasgow at the COP 26 meeting the world is still on track for a 2-2.9 degree Celsius warming
- China and India are not our friends and their emissions will continue to grow significantly.
- Adaption to climate change is what we as a planet will have to do.
Increases in frequency and severity of extreme weather
events such as heatwaves and heavy rain are occurring across all continents and
all oceans. Climate change is affecting nature, people’s lives and
infrastructure everywhere. Our world is warming, the climate changing
and extreme events are increasingly impacting nature and people's lives. According
to the IPCC, about half of the world’s population currently experiences severe
water shortages at some point during the year, in part due to climate change
and extreme events such as flooding and droughts. Drought conditions have
become more frequent in many regions, caused lengthening wildfire season
and increasing the areas burned in the western U.S. and other parts of the
world.
“Healthy ecosystems and rich biodiversity underpin human
survival. They provide countless services that make our Earth a habitable
place. However, climate change and increases in extreme weather events are
drastically and progressively impacting nature, weakening the structure,
functioning and resilience of ecosystems.”
“The world’s ecosystems on land, in freshwater and in the
ocean provide a wide array of essential services to humans. They produce the
food we eat and the oxygen we breathe. They filter our water, recycle nutrients
and help to limit global warming by storing large amounts of carbon.
Furthermore, they cool the air and offer “green” or “blue” spaces such as parks
and lakes for fun, adventure and relaxation, thus improving our health and
mental well-being. In short, healthy ecosystems are essential for human
survival and make our Earth livable.”
“Climate change – with its slow-onset events like sea level
rise and ocean acidification and increases in extreme weather – is drastically
and progressively affecting our world’s biodiversity and ecosystems. “
Although there have been some positive impacts on
agricultural productivity in some high-latitude regions, as the planet warms some
of the current agricultural land will
become increasingly unsuitable. Impacts will continue to increase, weakening
the structure, functioning and resilience of ecosystems and their ability to
regulate our world’s climate. Right now, ecosystems are removing and storing
more carbon from the atmosphere than they emit, helping to balance global
warming.
“Nature offers a lot of untapped potential, not only to
reduce climate risks, and deal with the causes of climate change, but also to
improve people’s lives. By restoring and safeguarding ecosystems on land and in
the ocean, we help plants and animals to build climate resilience. Nature, in
turn, can help us regulate the climate, give us clean, safe water, control
pests and diseases and pollinate our crops. However, investing in nature alone
won’t be enough. To secure a healthy, livable planet for everyone, we need to
transform our way of life fundamentally, especially key elements such as our
industry and energy sector as well as how cities and infrastructures are
planned and built. Taking action now gives us the best chance of success.”
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