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Matthew
21-08-04, 10:23 AM
Europe 'must adapt on climate'

Europeans must learn how to live with a changing climate as well as seeking to limit its effects by cutting emissions, the European Environment Agency says.

An EEA report, Impacts of Europe's changing climate, says fewer than 50 years remain to act against the threat.

It says melting meant Europe's glaciers lost a tenth of their mass last year, and harvests fell by almost a third.

The EEA says the climate change under way now probably exceeds all natural climate variation for a thousand years.

Warmer in Europe

The report brings together existing knowledge about how the climate is changing, and highlights some pointers of particular concern to Europe.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change suggests the global average temperature could on present trends be from 1.4 to 5.8C warmer in 2100 than in 1990.

The EEA says the comparable temperature increase for Europe is between 2 and 6.3C.

It says the 2003 heatwave caused melting which reduced the mass of the Alpine glaciers by 10%, and harvests in many southern countries were down by as much as 30%.

The European Union says the world should act to try to prevent temperatures rising more than 2C above their 1990 level, an increase which it regards as the highest sustainable level.

The report says: "On present trends this target is likely to be exceeded around 2050."

The EEA's executive director, Professor Jacqueline McGlade, said: "This report pulls together a wealth of evidence that climate change is already happening and having widespread impacts, many of them with substantial economic costs, on people and ecosystems across Europe.

"Europe has to continue to lead worldwide efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but this report also underlines that strategies are needed, at European, regional, national and local level, to adapt to climate change."

The clock is ticking

Professor McGlade told BBC News Online: "This is the first time we've called specifically for Europe to adapt, but we're not minimising the Kyoto Protocol process. We remain committed to the need to cut emissions.

"What the report shows is that, if we go on as we are, we have less than 50 years before we encounter conditions which will be uncharted and potentially hazardous."

The report says: by 2050, about 75% of the glaciers in the Swiss Alps will probably have disappeared

at sea, there has been a northward shift of zooplankton species over the last 30 years by up to 1,000 km (625 miles)

projections suggest annual river discharge will decline strongly in southern and south-eastern Europe, but increase almost everywhere in the north and north-east of the continent

cases of encephalitis carried by ticks, and associated with a warming climate, increased from 1980 to 1995 in the Baltic region and central Europe, and remain high.
The report says human activities have raised the atmospheric concentration of one of the main greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide, to 34% above its pre-industrial level.

Up not down

To achieve the EU's goal of limiting the temperature rise to 2C by 2100, it says, global greenhouse emissions "need to be reduced substantially".

But it says: "Due to ongoing emissions of greenhouse gases, the observed rise in global temperature is expected to continue and increase during the 21st Century."

The EEA underlines the very long time it would take to slow the rate of climate change, because of the longevity of many gases.

It says: "There is new and stronger evidence that most of the warming observed over the last 50 years is attributable to human activities.

"Even if society substantially reduces its emissions of greenhouse gases over the coming decades, the climate system would continue to change over the coming centuries."

[attachmentid=340]"Alpine glaciers felt the heat in 2003"

[attachmentid=339]"We shall seek relief from the heat more often"

[attachmentid=341]"Torrential rain will be more common in parts of Europe"

[ Source (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3570602.stm) ]

Beth
21-08-04, 11:39 AM
and the thing is this has been said for years and years, and noone took them seriously! :angry: people didnt believe and said they wanted proof....well world "leaders" heres your proof :angry:

and that idiot Bush who has so far refuse to join the Kyoto agreement...would rather cause more chaos in the world by blowing things up and causing more emissions....well IMHO should be accountable :(

do you know how much damage planes cause??
they are a lot bigger than cars..obviously and they fly closer to the protective layers of the planet, so the emissions cause more damage more quickly.....how often do our world leaders jump on they private jets to go and have tea with other world leaders??????

this is a subject that infuriates me

I try to do my bit, I use the bus and train, I have two green bins, I turn things off, I have energy light bulbs etc......but it make me wonder, everything joe public does to help is it being counteracted by idiots like Bush??

Beth
21-08-04, 02:35 PM
Are we really capable of changing climate to that extent?

do you know what I think....if all these "leaders" I use that word loosely, got off their backsides and stopped fighting and creating wars and concentrated on the bigger picture then yes we could make the changes.

but they dont, they need to concentrate on the important things like the planet, all these little wars, ok not little if you are in the middle of it, but little in the bigger scheme of things, at the end of the day how important is it going to be that a war has been won in a country which in 50 years time will be uninhabital because of draught and famine????

we are not going to have a planet worth living in soon, so fighting and stuff will not matter one little bit :(

Beth
21-08-04, 11:09 PM
Hey Pusscat :)

I went through just what you are now, when I was younger, about a milion years ago, I used to cry when I thought about the damamge we are doing
please please dont take the weight of the world on your shoulders, you keep doing what you are already doing, keep recyling and turning the telly off standby when you go to bed.

when you get back to school why dont you talk to one of your teachers about it, ask if they can do a lesson on it or something

In the meantime, talk to our friends, and family about it, ask them what they are doing and what they can do

ask the council for a local bottle bank and paper bank for example, then youi are doing something :) and hopefully people will follow your example

and dont forget the power of email, contact your MP and Tony Blair!

good luck with the fight, and please dont think you have to do it all on your own, becuase you dont :flowers:

Neighboured
22-08-04, 02:09 AM
Only 12? Gosh. A wise, old head on young shoulders! :notworthy: You must be very proud of her! :)