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Climate Change - 複本 2

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Climate Change. https://www.un.

org/en/climatechange/what-is-climate-change

Humans are responsible for global warming

Climate scientists have showed that humans are responsible for virtually all global
heating over the last 200 years. Human activities like the ones mentioned above are
causing greenhouse gases that are warming the world faster than at any time in at least
the last two thousand years.

The average temperature of the Earth’s surface is now about 1.2°C warmer than it was in
the late 1800s (before the industrial revolution) and warmer than at any time in the last
100,000 years. The last decade (2011-2020) was the warmest on record, and each of the
last four decades has been warmer than any previous decade since 1850.

Many people think climate change mainly means warmer temperatures. But temperature
rise is only the beginning of the story. Because the Earth is a system, where everything is
connected, changes in one area can influence changes in all others.

The consequences of climate change now include, among others, intense droughts, water
scarcity, severe fires, rising sea levels, flooding, melting polar ice, catastrophic storms
and declining biodiversity.

People are experiencing climate change in diverse ways

Climate change can affect our health, ability to grow food, housing, safety and work.
Some of us are already more vulnerable to climate impacts, such as people living in small
island nations and other developing countries. Conditions like sea-level rise and saltwater
intrusion have advanced to the point where whole communities have had to relocate, and
protracted droughts are putting people at risk of famine. In the future, the number of
people displaced by weather-related events is expected to rise.

Every increase in global warming matters

In a series of UN reports, thousands of scientists and government reviewers agreed that


limiting global temperature rise to no more than 1.5°C would help us avoid the worst
climate impacts and maintain a livable climate. Yet policies currently in place point to
a 3°C temperature rise by the end of the century.

The emissions that cause climate change come from every part of the world and affect
everyone, but some countries produce much more than others.The seven biggest
emitters alone (China, the United States of America, India, the European Union, Indonesia,
the Russian Federation, and Brazil) accounted for about half of all global greenhouse gas
emissions in 2020.
Everyone must take climate action, but people and countries creating more of the
problem have a greater responsibility to act first.

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