iv></figure><p id="d585">Mt. Everest’s base camp will be relocated due to receding glacier ice. Yellowstone is experiencing tremendous floods, statistically occurring just once every 500 years.</p><p id="9554">The feds warned states that the government would intervene unless they drastically increased the Colorado River system conservation.</p><p id="bad7">Due to the severe drought in the West, the federal government has stated that it will postpone the release of water from one of the Colorado River’s major reservoirs.</p><p id="d214">India and Pakistan are now experiencing severe heat waves, resulting in water and energy shortages.</p><p id="eebf">According to new statistics, sea levels in New Zealand are rising twice as rapidly as previously assumed. Meanwhile, in this hemisphere, new government maps of the United States west show that the whole region is now in a drought, even before summer has begun.</p><p id="91b3">Last month, the Antarctic saw temperatures that were 70 degrees above usual. In addition, the Western United States and Mexico faced the worst drought in 1,200 years this year. Meanwhile, the New Climate Institute claims that big firms such as Facebook, Apple, and Google are not moving fast enough to mitigate climate change and are inflating their progress.</p><p id="b3f9">All the snow during the Beijing Olympics is artificial, which is terrible news for the environment and future winter Olympics. The Great Salt Lake is vanishing, perhaps causing a massive ecological calamity. According to a recent study, the excessive heat in the seas exceeded the threshold of no return in 2014, implying that war
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mer oceans are now the new normal.</p><p id="e5cb">Climate change-related calamities cost the globe $100 billion last year. This month, temperatures in Alaska topped 67 degrees Fahrenheit, establishing a new December record. The weather has resulted in excessive rain, raising the risk of significant floods as the temperature continues to warm.</p><p id="5abf">According to the yearly Global Carbon Budget Report, the world has eleven years to escape catastrophic climate change.</p><p id="a039">The biggest delegation at the COP26 climate summit represents the fossil fuel sector. Maybe this is why Greta Thunberg declared the COP26 climate summit a failure.
“It is no secret that COP26 was a flop. It should go without saying that we can’t solve a crisis using the same methods that got us into it in the first place”</p><p id="3a07">To emphasize her point, Japan has refused to sign the declaration calling for the abolition of coal-fired power stations.</p><p id="ddd2">Exxon’s CEO has been accused of lying before Congress about his company’s awareness of its impact on climate change and its efforts to conceal that information.</p><p id="c290">According to a significant document leak, affluent countries such as Saudi Arabia, Japan, and Australia (among others) are putting pressure on the UN to delay their transition away from climate change. Wealthy countries also wonder why they should pay impoverished countries to transition to green technology.</p><p id="76de">A study of almost 90,000 climate researchers found that 99.9 percent agreed that people caused climate change, thereby ending any discussion.</p></article></body>
According to a new UN assessment, the world is on the verge of losing 1,000 wild animal species. According to groundbreaking research, one in every five people relies on logging, fishing, and hunting for a living, yet such methods may not be sustainable, “driving extinction” levels even higher.
Single-use plastics are being phased out in California. India and Canada also plan to prohibit single-use plastics from addressing environmental pollution and climate change.
Mt. Everest’s base camp will be relocated due to receding glacier ice. Yellowstone is experiencing tremendous floods, statistically occurring just once every 500 years.
The feds warned states that the government would intervene unless they drastically increased the Colorado River system conservation.
Due to the severe drought in the West, the federal government has stated that it will postpone the release of water from one of the Colorado River’s major reservoirs.
India and Pakistan are now experiencing severe heat waves, resulting in water and energy shortages.
According to new statistics, sea levels in New Zealand are rising twice as rapidly as previously assumed. Meanwhile, in this hemisphere, new government maps of the United States west show that the whole region is now in a drought, even before summer has begun.
Last month, the Antarctic saw temperatures that were 70 degrees above usual. In addition, the Western United States and Mexico faced the worst drought in 1,200 years this year. Meanwhile, the New Climate Institute claims that big firms such as Facebook, Apple, and Google are not moving fast enough to mitigate climate change and are inflating their progress.
All the snow during the Beijing Olympics is artificial, which is terrible news for the environment and future winter Olympics. The Great Salt Lake is vanishing, perhaps causing a massive ecological calamity. According to a recent study, the excessive heat in the seas exceeded the threshold of no return in 2014, implying that warmer oceans are now the new normal.
Climate change-related calamities cost the globe $100 billion last year. This month, temperatures in Alaska topped 67 degrees Fahrenheit, establishing a new December record. The weather has resulted in excessive rain, raising the risk of significant floods as the temperature continues to warm.
According to the yearly Global Carbon Budget Report, the world has eleven years to escape catastrophic climate change.
The biggest delegation at the COP26 climate summit represents the fossil fuel sector. Maybe this is why Greta Thunberg declared the COP26 climate summit a failure.
“It is no secret that COP26 was a flop. It should go without saying that we can’t solve a crisis using the same methods that got us into it in the first place”
To emphasize her point, Japan has refused to sign the declaration calling for the abolition of coal-fired power stations.
Exxon’s CEO has been accused of lying before Congress about his company’s awareness of its impact on climate change and its efforts to conceal that information.
According to a significant document leak, affluent countries such as Saudi Arabia, Japan, and Australia (among others) are putting pressure on the UN to delay their transition away from climate change. Wealthy countries also wonder why they should pay impoverished countries to transition to green technology.
A study of almost 90,000 climate researchers found that 99.9 percent agreed that people caused climate change, thereby ending any discussion.