Oct 15, 2018
By Michael Kramer
Members of Parliament are spending their first session back after Thanksgiving break – debating the perils of climate change.
An emergency debate taking place this evening was granted by House of Commons Speaker Geoffrey Regan – just a week after the U.N. climate change body issued an explosive warning – saying the world is on the precipice of major disasters – if governments don’t step up with a firmer plan to stop spewing so many greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
The world has already warmed up about 1 C compared to the mid-19th century and is experiencing the effects of that – including bigger storms, more frequent flooding, longer droughts and more forest fires.
Each 0.5 degree C of warming raises those risks significantly – with entire ecosystems possibly being eradicated, parts of the planet becoming too hot to sustain life – and island nations getting swamped by rising sea levels.
The U.N. report says the world needs to aim to stop the warming at 1.5 C – but that will be upon us by 2040 – if worldwide action isn’t taken.
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