| http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/06/2011622132049568952.html | Climate Change: It's bad and getting worse | |
Severe weather events are wracking the planet, and experts warn of even greater consequences to come. Dahr Jamail Last Modified: 23 Jun 2011 07:46 | ||
West Texas is currently undergoing its worst drought since the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, leaving wheat and cotton crops in the state in an extremely dire situation due to lack of soil moisture, as wildfires continue to burn. Central China recently experienced its worst drought in more than 50 years. Regional authorities have declared more than 1,300 lakes "dead", meaning they are out of use for both irrigation and drinking water supply. Floods have struck Eastern and Southern China, killing at least 52 and forcing the evacuation of hundreds of thousands, followed by severe flooding that again hit Eastern China, displacing or otherwise affecting five million people. Meanwhile in Europe, crops in the northwest are suffering the driest weather in decades. Scientific research confirms that, so far, humankind has raised the Earth's temperature, and the aforementioned events are a sign of what is to come. end quote. These kinds of damage are becoming more common worldwide, from the tornadoes of the Plains states in the U.S. moving into places like New York and even Massachusetts, so that literally tornadoes now happen from the Rockies eastward. To small tornadoes throughout the western states now that are not usually big enough to lift a house or car but often destroy greenhouses or barns, to the fires now in Texas and Arizona and New Mexico and other states. Then there is the snow that is still in most places in the mountains west of Yellowstone National Park, to the incredible waterfalls in Yosemite. And this is just the U.S. where I live. No matter where you are on earth climate change is affecting your country too. next quote from same article: "If you had a satellite view of the planet in the summer, there is about 40 per cent less ice in the Arctic than when Apollo 8 [in 1968] first sent back those photos [of Earth]," Bill McKibben, world renowned environmentalist and fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences told Al Jazeera, "Oceans are 30 per cent more acidic than they were 40 years ago. The atmosphere is four per cent more wet than 40 years ago because warm air holds more water than cold air. That means more deluge and downpour in wet areas and more dryness in dry areas. So we're seeing more destructive mega floods and storms, increasing thunderstorms, and increasing lightning strikes." end quote. |
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Thursday, June 23, 2011
Climate Change
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