write a speech about 'There is only one earth, care and share don't scam I will report and plz take u r time and write
Answers
Answer:
Let's recite the poem 'The Rainbow' twice or three times. When we read aloud or recite the poem, we find some words that end with the same sound, such as: seas - these - please - trees. V Such words are called rhyming words. Write the words that rhyme with the following words: sail-.. far..
pretty..sky
Explanation:
My perspective comes in part from the latest edition of the Living Planet Report — WWF’s 10th “state of the planet” account of how things are progressing on the “pale blue dot” — as Carl Sagan famously called our planet back in 1994. As editor of the Living Planet Report, I spend a lot of time trying to bring people around to my perspective — a One Planet Perspective — starting a lot of conversations by just sharing the data that shows humanity is leaving too big of a footprint on our planet.
We have a lot of powerful evidence that points to a need for change. But even if I put all that aside, it comes down to a simple question: What’s the alternative to a One Planet Perspective? Do any of us have a spare Earth stashed away somewhere? I don’t think so. So, it’s probably best that we change the way we act on this one.
With limited, and in many cases, dwindling natural capital, it is increasingly looking like we will be unable to provide all of the food, water and energy that we need for 9 or 10 (or more) billion people in the decades ahead.
Unfortunately, as in all previous editions of the report, the picture is not pretty: Biodiversity (as measured by the Living Planet Index generated by the Zoological Society of London) is continuing to decline, and humanity’s impact (as measured by the Ecological Footprint from Global Footprint Network) is continuing to increase.
Integrally connected — like two sides of the same coin — these ecological and socio-economic domains interact in a way that determines not only the health of the planet, but also the health and well-being of all of us. And, with limited, and in many cases, dwindling natural capital, it is increasingly looking like we will be unable to provide all of the food, water and energy that we need for 9 or 10 (or more) billion people in the decades ahead.
Certainly, the Living Planet Index isn’t the only measure of the health of the natural world. For some, this index and the Ecological Footprint may not provide a complete picture, and it’s good that people are asking questions and having debates. But clocks are ticking, and our planet is changing right before our eyes.
One person who’s seen our “pale blue dot” from a vantage few have shared is Dutch astronaut André Kuipers. In a unique collaboration between WWF and the European Space Agency, Kuipers launched the 2012 edition of the Living Planet Report from the International Space Station — saying:
“All of the life (on Earth) is taking place in 10 kilometers of air, and 10 kilometers of ocean. That’s it. Seemingly huge on the ground, and you cannot count the trees. But from space…”
From space you get a different perspective: a One Planet Perspective.
Just as an astronaut can see the whole Earth from space, the Living Planet Index and the Ecological Footprint are long-term time-series data sets that paint a big picture. To fill out the picture and enhance our understanding of the state of the planet at a global scale, the Living Planet Report includes other, complementary indicators, such as the Water Footprint (provided by the Water Footprint Network) and Planetary Boundaries (from the Stockholm Resilience Centre). It also looks at other global-scale data — such as atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, forest cover, fish stocks and water scarcity in the world’s major river basins.