Global Warming
Global Warming
Global Warming
Your food is harmed and made more expensive by earlier thaws and later freezes. Thaw and freeze dates are occurring a week earlier and later than they did 150 years ago.[1] This affects our societys agriculture by potentially damaging the food supply, making crops pricier, and even making global warming worse.[2] The U.S. will turn into a dustbowl as the agricultural belt moves northward into Canada.[3] Global warming is happening faster at northern latitudes, so these areas will have longer growing seasons in the future as places like the American Midwest become too hot and dry to grow as many crops. Catastrophic hurricanes are more likely to hit your home. Between 1970 and 2004, the number of category 4 and 5 hurricanes worldwide has nearly doubled.[4] In the 2000s, there were as many dangerous category 5 hurricanes as the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s combined. You will suffer from a longer, more intense allergy season than before. Research has shown that the higher carbon dioxide levels in the air, plus the warmer temperatures, force plants to bloom earlier and produce more pollen. You may not have enough water to drink. In the western U.S., mountain snowpacks provide up to 75% of the water supply.[5] Huge cities like Phoenix, Las Vegas, and Denver totally depend on this snow, and as global warming gets worse, the existing snow will melt and less new snow will be falling. Deadly smallpox could re-emerge as permafrost melts. This layer of permanently frozen soil beneath the grounds surface is thawing. Not only could this destroy buildings and railroad tracks, but as the ground thaws, corpses buried long ago could get discovered and end up infecting you with a devastating disease.[6]
Warming is destroying ecosystems worldwide that you and other people depend on, according to a highly detailed new study conducted by scientists at the Goddard Space Institute. The study found a trend of change all over planet Earth, including the timing of plant flowering, bird nesting, ice melting, salmon migration and pollen release; declines in populations of polar bears, krill and penguins; and increased growth of Siberian pines and cool-water ocean plankton.[1] This extensive study adds to the already voluminous evidence that global warming is real!
Sources:
[1] Marris, Emma, Warming world altering thousands of natural systems: Analysis shows effects of climate change on almost 30,000 biological and physical phenomena, Nature News, 14 May 2008 [3] Eilperin, Juliet, Climate Shift Tied To 150,000 Fatalities Most Victims Are Poor, Study Says, Washington Post, 17 November 2005, p. A20, also published in Nature, Volume 438, Number 7066, p. 257-394 [2] Brown, Lester, Plan B 2.0; Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble, Norton, NY NY, 2006, p.63 [4] Pearce, Fred, With Speed and Violence: Why Scientists Fear Tipping Points in Climate Change, Beacon Press, Boston, 2007 [5] Pearce, Fred, With Speed and Violence: Why Scientists Fear Tipping Points in Climate Change, Beacon Press, Boston, 2007; Speth, James Gustave, Red Sky at Morning; America and the Crisis of the Global Environment, Yale University Press, New Haven, 2004, p.60 [6] Pearce, Fred, With Speed and Violence: Why Scientists Fear Tipping Points in Climate Change, Beacon Press, Boston, 2007, p.74-85 [7] Connor, Steve, Carbon dioxide rate is at highest level for 650,000 years, The Independent, 3 February 2007 [8] Adam, David, World Carbon Dioxide Levels Highest for 650,000 Years, Says US Report, The Guardian, 13 May 2008 [9] Greenhouse Gases, Carbon Dioxide and Methane, Rise Sharply in 2007, ScienceDaily, Thursday 24 April 2008