Environmental Sciences, asked by kristoffaelle7, 7 months ago

how the world works, what are we doing to it right now and what can we do to help protect and improve it essay

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Answered by Student6d18
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Answered by Anonymous
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Greenhouse gas emissions are rising, scientists’ extreme weather predictions appear to be coming true, the air in our cities is becoming dangerous, groundwater is getting scarce, ocean health and fish stocks are declining, forests and natural habitats are being destroyed, plastic in our ocean is out of control and researchers warn that a “biological annihilation” of wildlife means a human-driven sixth mass extinction event is underway.

Greenhouse gas emissions are rising, scientists’ extreme weather predictions appear to be coming true, the air in our cities is becoming dangerous, groundwater is getting scarce, ocean health and fish stocks are declining, forests and natural habitats are being destroyed, plastic in our ocean is out of control and researchers warn that a “biological annihilation” of wildlife means a human-driven sixth mass extinction event is underway.Worse still, earth systems scientists warn that, because of our impact on the planet, we are in real – existential – danger. We risk flipping ourselves out of the goldilocks “Holocene” period of predictable warm weather (which has allowed humans to flourish during the last 12,000 years) and into a highly risky “hothouse earth” scenario, with uncontrolled feedback driving faster warming and more droughts and storms.

These environmental challenges have enormous implications for our economy, society and politics.

These environmental challenges have enormous implications for our economy, society and politics.This doesn’t make an easy bedtime story for those who have their whole lives still ahead of them. And it sets us up for an even more unfair world than we have today as we get close to nine billion people on the planet, more than two-thirds of whom will rub shoulders with each other in cities and towns all around the world.

These environmental challenges have enormous implications for our economy, society and politics.This doesn’t make an easy bedtime story for those who have their whole lives still ahead of them. And it sets us up for an even more unfair world than we have today as we get close to nine billion people on the planet, more than two-thirds of whom will rub shoulders with each other in cities and towns all around the world.Children born into poverty today – even those in relatively richer countries – will most likely not have the wealth or protection to weather the storms ahead. “Hothouse Earth” could trigger a hotbed of anger.

These environmental challenges have enormous implications for our economy, society and politics.This doesn’t make an easy bedtime story for those who have their whole lives still ahead of them. And it sets us up for an even more unfair world than we have today as we get close to nine billion people on the planet, more than two-thirds of whom will rub shoulders with each other in cities and towns all around the world.Children born into poverty today – even those in relatively richer countries – will most likely not have the wealth or protection to weather the storms ahead. “Hothouse Earth” could trigger a hotbed of anger.These really are the biggest, most underpinning risks of our time.

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