Climate Change & How This Effects Us All

Why should you take action to avoid catastrophic climate change?
Global warming is happening right now in front of our eyes. Our weather is changing. Every one of the hottest 15 years on record has occurred since 1980. There is now huge consensus among scientists that we face serious climate change - we just don't know what level of severity it will reach or when...
We probably have about 20 - 30 years left to sort this global problem out and we all need to spend our efforts and money on actions that deliver the fastest and largest Co2 reductions possible.
We all have a part to play and we all need to work together to spread the understanding of this important climate change issue and our determination to tackle climate change.
What is Climate Change?
When fossils & wood are burnt they release greenhouse gases that occur naturally in the atmosphere, making the average temperature around 15 degrees C. Without this protective "Blanket" our world would be a much colder -18 degrees C.
However, the extra greenhouse gases that humankind has emitted have already significantly altered the composition of the atmosphere, adding to the blanket and increasing the average temperature for the Earth. This is causing human-induced climate change. To stopthis action spiralling out of control, we must radically reduce emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
Effects of Climate Change
The real impact of climate change remains worryingly uncertain, with consequences for all communities, species and environments across the world. Effects include:
* Changing weather bringing drought and flooding, affecting drinking water supplies and agriculture.
* Irreversible loss of many species of plants and animals
* Rising sea levels, threatening freshwater supplies because of salt water intrusion
* Melting glaciers, threatening freshwater supplies for millions of people who depend on glacier meltwater.
We will all experience these effects but an appalling injustice of climate change will be that those people in the developing world, who have contributed little towards the problem, are at the greatest risk and will be the hardest hit.