Sunday, November 18, 2018

Climate Change: The Harsh Reality

Climate change, as much as people talk about it (or ignore it), is a major threat to the people who live on Earth. I’m quite sure that would be everyone, maybe excepting a few astronauts. Still, the planet those astronauts are coming back to is being harmed every day and growing weaker. To me, this says that everybody should care about what happens to the earth they live on. Here are two pretty good examples of what climate change is and what it can do…

It’s no secret that more urban areas are flooding these days, and not just in the United States. From Miami, Florida to Guangzhou, China, the streets are backing up with water, partially due to infrastructure that can’t compensate for the sea levels rising and partially due to climate change.

In Miami-Dade County, water rises through storm drains, taking sewage with it and spreading it over the expanse of the streets.


Sea levels are expected to rise more and more while this type of flooding will also occur consistently throughout the year. This will not only affect people’s communities but also the costs of repair for these multitudinous flood damages.

In the city of Guangzhou, China - May of 2017 - flood records were broken by torrential rainfall.

Some of the highest numbers were from northern districts like Jiulongzhen and Huangpu which reported 524 millimeters or approximately 21 inches of rain in twenty-four hours. If you don’t know, that’s a lot of rain in that amount of time according to average rainfall measurements. Most of this flooding was blamed on bad infrastructure, but there was also the theory of the “heat island effect” which supposedly could have intensified the warm air streams that created the storm. This effect is described by the Environmental Protection Agency as urban or built up areas that have a higher temperature than surrounding rural areas due to higher pollution rates and greenhouse gas emissions.

From these two examples alone, we can verify that climate change is a viable threat to our world. Even in areas far away from our own, the effects of climate change are harming entire cities, and not only with sea levels rising or temperatures raising around urban areas. Not only those who live in these highly affected places, but also those who live around them have the responsibility to take action and try to help solve these problems. Small things always help like turning the lights off or using less water. They might be easily forgettable, but they will make a difference in slowing down climate change - no matter how small. Then, there are the greater actions we can take such as switching our energy sources to more sustainable ones, raising awareness about climate change issues, and focusing our efforts on improving the infrastructure of cities to help prevent flooding in the aforementioned examples.

No, things are not going to happen right away, but if we have patience and determination, I believe that we can begin to heal the planet.

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Thanks for reading! :)

1 comment:

  1. This is a really interesting post! I knew that sea levels were rising but I had no idea that streets in so many places were flooded with water.

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