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World to hit temperature tipping point 10 years faster than forecast
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2023-03-18 at 6:20 AM UTC
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2023-03-18 at 8:05 AM UTC
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2023-03-19 at 10:58 PM UTC
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2023-03-19 at 11 PM UTCHe who deals it feels it.
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2023-03-19 at 11:05 PM UTC
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2023-03-19 at 11:06 PM UTC
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2023-03-19 at 11:07 PM UTCmuch better
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2023-03-21 at 5:53 AM UTC
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2023-03-23 at 9:43 PM UTC
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2023-03-23 at 10:30 PM UTCOh wow a desert environment being desert
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2023-03-23 at 10:31 PM UTCWhat's wrong with deserts
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2023-03-23 at 10:46 PM UTCOh gee, another thoughtful and compelling comment.
Great contribution, I can see now why this forum is thriving. -
2023-03-23 at 10:47 PM UTC
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2023-03-23 at 10:58 PM UTCThe United Nations has zero credibility. All they do is get caught in lie after lie after lie.
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2023-03-23 at 11 PM UTC
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2023-03-24 at 4:38 PM UTC
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2023-03-24 at 5:14 PM UTC
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2023-03-24 at 5:15 PM UTC
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2023-03-24 at 5:17 PM UTC
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2023-03-24 at 5:22 PM UTCThere’s less need to convince people of a future climate doomsday. It’s already here.
The unfolding climate crisis was laid bare in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report released on Monday: Between 3.3 billion and 3.6 billion people live in places “highly vulnerable to climate change,” and from 2010 to 2020, “human mortality from floods, droughts and storms was 15 times higher” in these regions than in less vulnerable regions.
The report continued: “In all regions increases in extreme heat events have resulted in human mortality and morbidity (very high confidence). The occurrence of climate-related food-borne and water-borne diseases (very high confidence) and the incidence of vector-borne diseases (high confidence) have increased.”
In other words: Climate change is already killing people. And, the report makes clear, it will kill more.
Again, to quote from the report: “In the near term, every region in the world is projected to face further increases in climate hazards (medium to high confidence, depending on region and hazard), increasing multiple risks to ecosystems and humans (very high confidence). Hazards and associated risks expected in the near-term include an increase in heat-related human mortality and morbidity (high confidence), food-borne, water-borne, and vector-borne diseases (high confidence), mental health challenges (very high confidence), flooding in coastal and other low-lying cities and regions (high confidence), biodiversity loss in land, freshwater and ocean ecosystems (medium to very high confidence, depending on ecosystem), and a decrease in food production in some regions (high confidence).”