1.WHAT IS CLIMA-WPS Office
1.WHAT IS CLIMA-WPS Office
1.WHAT IS CLIMA-WPS Office
Burning fossil fuels generates greenhouse gas emissions that act like a blanket
wrapped around the Earth, trapping the sun’s heat and raising temperatures.
The main greenhouse gases that are causing climate change include carbon dioxide
and methane. These come from using gasoline for driving a car or coal for heating
a building, for example. Clearing land and cutting down forests can also release
carbon dioxide. Agriculture, oil and gas operations are major sources of methane
emissions. Energy, industry, transport, buildings, agriculture and land use are
among the main sectors causing greenhouse gases.
A. Hotter temperatures
As greenhouse gas concentrations rise, so does the global surface temperature. The
last decade, 2011-2020, is the warmest on record. Since the 1980s, each decade has
been warmer than the previous one. Nearly all land areas are seeing more hot days
and heat waves. Higher temperatures increase heat-related illnesses and make
working outdoors more difficult. Wildfires start more easily and spread more
rapidly when conditions are hotter. Temperatures in the Arctic have warmed at
least twice as fast as the global average.
Destructive storms have become more intense and more frequent in many regions.
As temperatures rise, more moisture evaporates, which exacerbates extreme
rainfall and flooding, causing more destructive storms. The frequency and extent of
tropical storms is also affected by the warming ocean. Cyclones, hurricanes, and
typhoons feed on warm waters at the ocean surface. Such storms often destroy
homes and communities, causing deaths and huge economic losses.
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C. Increased drought
The ocean soaks up most of the heat from global warming. The rate at which the
ocean is warming strongly increased over the past two decades, across all depths of
the ocean. As the ocean warms, its volume increases since water expands as it gets
warmer. Melting ice sheets also cause sea levels to rise, threatening coastal and
island communities. In addition, the ocean absorbs carbon dioxide, keeping it from
the atmosphere. But more carbon dioxide makes the ocean more acidic, which
endangers marine life and coral reefs.
E. Loss of species
Climate change poses risks to the survival of species on land and in the ocean.
These risks increase as temperatures climb. Exacerbated by climate change, the
world is losing species at a rate 1,000 times greater than at any other time in
recorded human history. One million species are at risk of becoming extinct within
the next few decades. Forest fires, extreme weather, and invasive pests and
diseases are among many threats related to climate change. Some species will be
able to relocate and survive, but others will not.
Changes in the climate and increases in extreme weather events are among the
reasons behind a global rise in hunger and poor nutrition. Fisheries, crops, and
livestock may be destroyed or become less productive. With the ocean becoming
more acidic, marine resources that feed billions of people are at risk. Changes in
snow and ice cover in many Arctic regions have disrupted food supplies from
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herding, hunting, and fishing. Heat stress can diminish water and grasslands for
grazing, causing declining crop yields and affecting livestock.
Climate change is the single biggest health threat facing humanity. Climate
impacts are already harming health, through air pollution, disease, extreme weather
events, forced displacement, pressures on mental health, and increased hunger and
poor nutrition in places where people cannot grow or find sufficient food. Every
year, environmental factors take the lives of around 13 million people. Changing
weather patterns are expanding diseases, and extreme weather events increase
deaths and make it difficult for health care systems to keep up.
Climate change increases the factors that put and keep people in poverty. Floods
may sweep away urban slums, destroying homes and livelihoods. Heat can make it
difficult to work in outdoor jobs. Water scarcity may affect crops. Over the past
decade (2010–2019), weather-related events displaced an estimated 23.1 million
people on average each year, leaving many more vulnerable to poverty. Most
refugees come from countries that are most vulnerable and least ready to adapt to
the impacts of climate change.
Architecture has always played a huge role in climate change. We know that
buildings contribute to nearly half of the nation’s CO2 (carbon dioxide) emissions
– which is a huge part of the problem, but the good news is, it’s a huge part of the
solution. When we add the fact that transportation accounts for another third of
CO2 emissions, and, together, buildings and transportation account for over 75%
of the energy consumed in North America, we realize the impact a well designed,
dense, environmentally responsible city can have on our climate.
Architects can lead the climate change movement by designing the greenest,
healthiest buildings and environments. The very best in technical advancements
needed to produce climate-saving buildings have been put in place over the last
few decades – for example, the LEEDTM (Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design) rating system is marked for excellence in green building
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and used in over 150 countries. And LEEDTM is only one of many systems to
track and record sustainability. While new technologies and designs help lower
emissions and generate energy, today’s sustainability experts were not the first to
consider the importance of utilizing renewable resources. Architects have been
leaders in environment-friendly building for years – harnessing natural energy and
using local resources long before advancements in construction.
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better investment over the lifecycle of the building, leaving a legacy for our
children.
C. Global South countries that have led the way in socio-economic rights
jurisprudence are likely to be particularly fertile jurisdictions for human rights-
based climate cases in future.
D. Cases against corporations are set to increase, aided by the trend for human
rights due diligence laws that concretize corporate responsibilities on human rights
into hard law.
Design, architecture and engineering professions are directly responsible for the
development of our physical environment. Landscape architects make decisions
effecting the environment and public health and safety in many aspects of their
practices. While planning functional and aesthetically pleasing open spaces, it is
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important to take into consideration the protection of the environment and natural
resources. The aim of this study is to research the negative impacts of landscape
architectural practices on the environment and to identify opportunities for
conservation via itemising the basic points that should be considered in order to
make the impacts positive. Research has shown that landscape designs can have
either positive or negative impacts on the environment depending on the way they
are designed, implemented and maintained. Unsustainable land development and
management practices significantly disturb the elements of ecosystems damaging
the soil and vegetation and start a chain of negative effects resulting in reduced
infiltration, increase in runoff, excess sedimentation, water pollution, increase in
greenhouse gases and energy consumption. Sustainable landscape architectural
practices conserve soil and vegetation, materials and energy, promote the
sustainable use of water and land, support natural ecosystem functions, and
promote human health and well-being.