Today leading science experts released the latest United Nations report on the impacts of climate change around the world. As the Associated Press reported:
"The big risks and overall effects of global warming are far more immediate and local than scientists once thought. It's not just about melting ice, threatened animals and plants. It's about the human problems of hunger, disease, drought, flooding, refugees and war, becoming worse."
We can meet the climate challenge, but we must act now. Here are five things you need to know about climate change:
- Climate change is already impacting every country in different ways.
Climate change is happening now, and it affects all of us. The UN reported last week that 2013 was the sixth warmest year in recorded history. This heat is having dangerous effects -- record heat waves are affecting public health, droughts threaten food security, and water supplies for people around the world are at risk.
Climate change threatens everything -- from our food supply to the health of the oceans to the strength of our economies. It's also increasingly clear that the poorest among us are harmed the most by climate change. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon calls this "the greatest collective challenge facing humankind today."
From rising sea levels to more intense storms, many communities are already dealing with the negative impacts of climate change.
Those who act now will be better prepared to minimize damage in the years ahead -- and better positioned to seize the economic opportunities that come from transitioning to a clean energy future. That's why communities from New York City to Buenos Aires are taking steps now to address climate change and its impacts.
Dealing with climate change is about managing risks. If we refuse to act, we risk losing so much:
- Rich marine ecosystems and the fishing communities that depend on them.
- Agricultural productivity and livelihoods for farmers, when crops fail because of heat waves and drought. We risk food insecurity, famine, and hunger for millions.
- Coastal communities when sea levels rise -- communities that were not built to withstand a changing climate.
- If we take meaningful action now, we can help prevent many of these risks from becoming reality.
By transitioning to a clean energy future, we can address this challenge while creating economic opportunities. But getting there will take the collective will to act from citizens, communities, corporations, and world leaders alike.