English, asked by SAHIL8252, 10 months ago

Climate change is the greatest threat for the humanity today debate

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Answered by nandanpriyanka
8

Answer :climate change is transforming the way we think about security. "This will not be the first time people have fought over land, water and resources, but this time it will be on a scale that dwarfs the conflicts of the past", said the Congolese representative at the UN Security Council debate in April 2007. The French called it the "number one threat to mankind".

The representative from Papua New Guinea said the dangers that small island States and their populations faced [from climate change] were "no less serious than those faced by nations and peoples threatened by guns and bombs". An increase of just half a metre in sea level would put at risk the very survival of the human population of many Pacific Island nations.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the scenarios facing us were alarming. Scarce resources -- whether energy, water or arable land -- could lead to a breakdown in established codes of conduct, and even to outright conflict. He cautioned Member States to focus more clearly on the benefits of early action. Our increasingly unstable climate is no longer seen as primarily an environmental or economic issue. Over the past two years, the threat we face has grown larger in scale and sharper in outline.

Explanation:

Answered by shivanirishik
3

Answer:

Explanation:

For the past decade, the World Economic Forum has put out a yearly review of the greatest threats to our world—the economic and geopolitical risks that endanger our planet, our way of life, and even our species.

This year, for the third year running, “extreme weather” induced by climate change has taken the top spot in the Global Risks Report (pdf), issued the week prior to the forum’s gab fest in Davos, Switzerland.  In second and third place are failed climate-change mitigation, and natural disasters, respectively.

Economic risks such as fiscal crises and market collapses, which were once the preoccupation of the 1,000 or so surveyed experts in business, government, and civil society, are secondary to the risks we pose to our planet. That’s not to say we’re rid of them, however: The report noted increasing market volatility, as well as intensifying “headwinds facing the global economy.” Political turmoil is another concern: “Geopolitical and geo-economic tensions are rising among the world’s major powers. These tensions represent the most urgent global risks at present.” While climate crisis may be a greater concern in the long-run, political turmoil seems closer on the horizon

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