Dangers include food and
fresh water scarcity, damage to infrastructure and devastating sea - level rise.
Plan B thoughtfully examines the critical global issues of our time:
fresh water scarcity, soil depletion, deforestation; desertification; fisheries collapse; habitat destruction; species extinction; extreme weather; global warming, energy policy, and human population growth.
In turn, these effects jeopardize our vulnerable global food system and exacerbate
fresh water scarcity and the refugee crisis.
Instead, the report focuses on problems that are likely to disproportionately hit developing countries: coastal inundation from rising sea levels, plummeting food production and associated malnutrition, unprecedented heat waves, increasing
fresh water scarcity, more frequent and intense tropical cyclones, and the loss of biodiversity.
Not exact matches
This implies that risks are not too big or overarching (like resource
scarcity, rising levels of atmospheric CO2, or global warming) but are more focused e.g. extreme weather, increased greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture or from energy use, or a lack of
fresh water.
The research found that this international demand for
fresh water can contribute to pressures on
water resources in regions of the world that currently experience
water scarcity.
Water scarcity may force people to use poor quality sources of fresh water, such as - often contaminated - ri
Water scarcity may force people to use poor quality sources of
fresh water, such as - often contaminated - ri
water, such as - often contaminated - rivers.
By 2025, droughts, food shortages and
scarcity of
fresh water will plague large swaths of the globe, from northern China to the Horn of Africa.
The costs of this global ecological overspending include deforestation, drought,
fresh -
water scarcity, soil erosion, biodiversity loss, and the buildup of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Living space, amount of
fresh water, food
scarcity — none of these problems will disappear if SLR is creeping instead of a flash flood.
Climate change won't kill all of us — but it will dramatically reduce the human population through the warming - driven spread of infectious disease, the collapse of agriculture in traditionally fertile areas and the increasing
scarcity of
fresh drinking
water.
Fresh water is becoming increasingly scarce, and in countries like India and China that are rapidly growing, the
scarcity will hit hardest as the
The IPCC has already concluded that it is «virtually certain that human influence has warmed the global climate system» and that it is «extremely likely that more than half of the observed increase in global average surface temperature from 1951 to 2010» is anthropogenic.1 Its new report outlines the future threats of further global warming: increased
scarcity of food and
fresh water; extreme weather events; rise in sea level; loss of biodiversity; areas becoming uninhabitable; and mass human migration, conflict and violence.