Yup but it got cleaned up.
'If the climate stays like this, we won't make it' say those on the frontline of Africa's drought
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe (CNN)Torrents of water once thundered over the precipice at Victoria Falls, on the border of Zimbabwe and Zambia, shrouding the area in mist.
But a multi-year drought has slowed large sections of the imposing falls to little more than a weak stream, and the lush vegetation they once nourished is hot and dry.
The parched waterfall is perhaps the most visible effect of the drought that is hammering this region. But it is not the most devastating. The World Food Program says that more than 7 million people in Zimbabwe alone are going hungry, with a further 45 million people across southern Africa at risk.
As delegates desperately search for a practical plan for cutting emissions at the COP25 meetings in Madrid, Spain, this week, this region is a stark reminder that the climate crisis is here and now -- and that countries that did the least to cause the climate crisis are already being hit the hardest.
"Our future is still ahead of us," said Nkosi Nyathi, a 16-year-old climate activist from Victoria Falls, ahead of his flight to COP25 in Madrid. "We are looking at what is already happening with the drought. What is our future going to be like? Even just 10 years down the line or 15 years down the line, it will affect us very much."
Nyathi started campaigning for the environment when he was just 10 years old. He says while he wasn't good at sports, he was good at debating, so he started going into the communities to educate people about renewable energy and climate change.
More: https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/14/africa/climate-change-southern-africa-intl/index.html
We are privileged here but the rest of the world is suffering from our decadence. It is hard for most Canadians to see how our lifestyle is affecting the third world, not just with climate, but their poverty is directly related to our lifestyle, our economics and our lust for power.
They want more than we are willing to give right now . Sort of like our veterans .
By the time she is fifteen she will be a litter bug , like all those woke Friday protesters leaving their signs behind .
Yes I tend to agree . Out here , many are working on watershed habitat . Keeping green spaces productive and enhancing fish habitat . Far more productive then giving money to Western Forest Products to plant trees they are already required to plant .Since there's no "urgency" about climate change (all faux news) it's no big deal. Once the manufacturers are able to produce, in bulk, electric vehicles that are affordable to the average person and ways to over come how to re-use or recycle batteries, the price will eventually come down. Now, it's not a big deal and the cars we drive now-a-days are quite efficient anyway.
Until then, we'll still need fossil fuels as we'll somehow have to be able to recharge and that takes electricity which in turn, will take fossil fuels with perhaps a little bit of green energy to back it up. Besides, why should the average Joe subsidize solar panels and electric vehicles that the upper crust can afford and that most of us can't afford to purchase ourselves. It doesn't make sense.
There's no rush and it'll happen in the next 40 - 50 years anyways so no big deal. We live in a pretty clean environment right now and it'll only get better with technology. We simply need to concentrate on the areas that are lacking in any substantial regulations for actual pollution and by distributing the technology we currently have to the nations that need it for clean water, air and soil. The biggest obstacle is likely tyrannical governments more than anything.
No way , the end is near . The end is near I tell ya .Since there's no "urgency" about climate change (all faux news) it's no big deal. Once the manufacturers are able to produce, in bulk, electric vehicles that are affordable to the average person and ways to over come how to re-use or recycle batteries, the price will eventually come down. Now, it's not a big deal and the cars we drive now-a-days are quite efficient anyway.
Until then, we'll still need fossil fuels as we'll somehow have to be able to recharge and that takes electricity which in turn, will take fossil fuels with perhaps a little bit of green energy to back it up. Besides, why should the average Joe subsidize solar panels and electric vehicles that the upper crust can afford and that most of us can't afford to purchase ourselves. It doesn't make sense.
There's no rush and it'll happen in the next 40 - 50 years anyways so no big deal. We live in a pretty clean environment right now and it'll only get better with technology. We simply need to concentrate on the areas that are lacking in any substantial regulations for actual pollution and by distributing the technology we currently have to the nations that need it for clean water, air and soil. The biggest obstacle is likely tyrannical governments more than anything.
No Cliffy their poverty is directly the fault of tribalism and corruption. What you would like to see emulated here .'If the climate stays like this, we won't make it' say those on the frontline of Africa's drought
Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe (CNN)Torrents of water once thundered over the precipice at Victoria Falls, on the border of Zimbabwe and Zambia, shrouding the area in mist.
But a multi-year drought has slowed large sections of the imposing falls to little more than a weak stream, and the lush vegetation they once nourished is hot and dry.
The parched waterfall is perhaps the most visible effect of the drought that is hammering this region. But it is not the most devastating. The World Food Program says that more than 7 million people in Zimbabwe alone are going hungry, with a further 45 million people across southern Africa at risk.
As delegates desperately search for a practical plan for cutting emissions at the COP25 meetings in Madrid, Spain, this week, this region is a stark reminder that the climate crisis is here and now -- and that countries that did the least to cause the climate crisis are already being hit the hardest.
"Our future is still ahead of us," said Nkosi Nyathi, a 16-year-old climate activist from Victoria Falls, ahead of his flight to COP25 in Madrid. "We are looking at what is already happening with the drought. What is our future going to be like? Even just 10 years down the line or 15 years down the line, it will affect us very much."
Nyathi started campaigning for the environment when he was just 10 years old. He says while he wasn't good at sports, he was good at debating, so he started going into the communities to educate people about renewable energy and climate change.
More: https://www.cnn.com/2019/12/14/africa/climate-change-southern-africa-intl/index.html
We are privileged here but the rest of the world is suffering from our decadence. It is hard for most Canadians to see how our lifestyle is affecting the third world, not just with climate, but their poverty is directly related to our lifestyle, our economics and our lust for power.
Yes I tend to agree . Out here , many are working on watershed habitat . Keeping green spaces productive and enhancing fish habitat . Far more productive then giving money to Western Forest Products to plant trees they are already required to plant .
Cliffy, I just wanted you to know that I talked to Santa this year, and he informed me that he only gives presents to the good girls and boys that do not posts hundreds of meme's on adult forums.
You may still have time to change, but as it stands now, you are on Santa's "naughty" list. I heard you had your heart set on that model train set.
B.S.It is really foolish to attribute poverty to a single cause. It happens due to many factors, often interlinked. The main reason it persists is the unwillingness of those who have more than they need, to share adequately from their surplus.
It is really foolish to attribute poverty to a single cause. It happens due to many factors, often interlinked. The main reason it persists is the unwillingness of those who have more than they need, to share adequately from their surplus.
Good thing too or we would all be freezing in the dark. Except the trust fund socialists.It's not easy forming the Global Socialist State.
Now there is the true problem with all this globull warming crap. We are ignoring what is really important. Virtue signaling in Canada like banning plastic straws distracts from the real garbage problem around the globe.