THE FACTS ABOUT THE LUMING CLIMATE CRISIS — Great Waves of Change.
Researched and compiled By Sybella L. Loram
Larger than an essay, smaller than a book — worth a read, I promise!
The new revelation delivered by the new messenger
The phrase “Great Waves of Change” refers to the converging crises affecting humanity. These crises include climate change, resource depletion, economic, social and political upheaval. The Great Waves constitute the greatest threat humanity has ever faced. The Great Waves of Change presents a prophecy of the difficult times ahead, and the steps you can take to navigate an increasingly turbulent and uncertain future for humanity.
Foreword
This small book of information transcends the typical warnings of an impending apocalypse driven by climate disaster. It delves deeper into humanity’s ongoing challenges — water shortages, famine, plagues, and diseases fueled by greed. Conflict and wars persist alongside the continuous extinction of countless indigenous species.
Yet, this is not a call to “save the earth,” for the planet itself does not require saving. The earth existed long before humanity and will continue to endure long after the human family has vanished.
In the Beginning, There was?
When the earth was created for those who chose separation from source, every detail was thought of, every minute detail, from the hairs on the back of our hands to our phenomenal ecosystem. Our planet created to be self-sufficient, providing all sentient beings with the means for shelter, food, along with all materials that make human life possible to survive through its evolution throughout its history.
These materials being the food we eat, the water we drink, the planet's natural resources such as fossil fuels, lime, amber, coal, magnesium, copper, zinc, salt, selenium — let us not forget, gold, silver, and diamonds.
The natural world provides countless essential services that often go unnoticed. These include climate regulation — where rainforests serve as the lungs of our planet — natural flood defenses, air purification through vegetation, and the pollination of crops by insects. When we examine the intricate balance of these ecosystems — frequently overlooked and taken for granted — it becomes undeniably clear how profoundly human actions have disrupted and harmed these vital systems.
As we navigate the warnings of the forth-coming disaster, we need to recognize these warnings as a wake-up call — an opportunity to think logically about the aspects of the natural world we are destroying. Reflecting on these actions, we must confront the horrific effects this will have on the future of our children. It’s crucial that we no longer continue as idle, selfish, ambivalent fools.
Social upheaval, coups, civil and world wars over resources. With more intense natural disasters, with economic instability, nations falling into debt leading to financial collapse. This is what the future generations will see. This is what humans have created — not could create — but have created. We have already passed the turning point for this.
Food availability is increasingly compromised, both in quality and quantity. Nutrients, once derived from mineral-rich soil, have been significantly depleted. Agriculture, as a biological system, is highly vulnerable to climate change, relying heavily on stable weather and consistent climate conditions. With heavier rainfall during our unpredictable winters, hotter summers, water scarcity has had a negative impact on productivity, further exacerbating the challenges faced by global food systems.
Earth’s topsoil is steadily being lost, because of the depletion of nutrients, poison from mass chemicals, excessive rainfall resulting in a significant runoff — particularly on sloping fields — contributes to this degradation. This process leads to desertification, turning once-fertile land into barren landscapes that can no longer support biodiversity, food crops, or even grazing animals.
As soil degradation worsens, we see lower crop yields leading to higher food prices. These are inevitable consequences, which are already affecting the global economy today. The United Nations warns that, at the current rate of degradation, the world could lose all its topsoil within 60 years — a crisis that poses a significant threat to the global economy and food security.
This loss of biodiversity further reduces the ability to sustain diverse plant life, triggering a cascade of declines across our planet’s ecosystems. It is a stark reminder of the urgent need to address soil preservation and protect the foundation of life on Earth.
The Effects Globally
In 2019, South-East and East Asia experienced the internal displacement of 9.6 million people from cyclones, floods, and typhoons. It is predicted Asia could suffer larger losses than most other regions in this world because of the climate-changes our planet is currently facing.
It is also worth noting that a significant portion of the EU’s food imports originate from Asia, with China, India, Ukraine, and Indonesia being a major exporter.
Dams and Rivers Starving the poorer countries as they stop the natural flow.
China’s large-scale damming of rivers highlights the growing challenges of water scarcity and unfair distribution. With extensive transboundary dam projects, concerns over water control, availability are escalating. China’s actions raise concerns about hydro-hegemony, as water becomes a powerful tool for influence and control in regional dynamics. Downstream countries face increased vulnerability to water shortages, with other issues manipulated by upstream nations.
These disputes over water resources are already creating civil unrest, skirmishes soon to be outright war. Even now, 2025, Israel deprives people in Gaza of water by controlling the electricity and blocking fuel from entering.
Rivers like the Mekong, Salween, and Brahmaputra — flowing through multiple countries — serve as striking examples of this issue.
To mitigate the risk of dam construction leading to conflict, international cooperation, transparent water-sharing agreements, and alternative solutions are crucial. These measures can prevent disputes, ensure equitable water management.
Creating institutions like the Nile Basin Initiative can facilitate dialogue and cooperation among riparian states.
The Overpopulation problem, with ever more mouths to feed.
The human population is growing too large for society or the planet to sustain. Thanks to advancements in child immunization and medical care, rising global populations are fueled by increased life expectancy.
This world population problem, with the ongoing overconsumption of the world’s resources, we are facing a world population crisis. The earth does not receive enough time to replenish. Eventually, the world population will exceed agricultural capacity, exasperating the already dwindling resources. Water being the largest of humanity's necessities to survive.
As humans continue to deplete the planet, we also destroy villages, while causing the displacement of indigenous tribes within their lands. Our darker invading past is a testament to humanity’s lack of empathy with the crimes committed against our brothers and sisters. These actions, rooted in exploitation with total disregard of the impact. Extraction of a country's natural resources without adequate compensation, leading to environmental damage and long-term resource scarcity for those invaded. Native American Indians in the USA are a good example.
Food wastage from a superstore in one week
Antonio Guterres, Secretary General of the United Nations, said,
“There is enough food in our world for everyone, but we must work together, urgently, to make this zero-hunger world a reality.” The issue is about distribution. “In our world of plenty, I will never accept the death from hunger of a single child, woman or man. When war is waged, people go hungry.”
Climate change will affect every country in the world, its impact will be felt differently across all regions, some being hit much worse than others. These differences are affected by the region’s existing level of poverty. We can be sure that nations with less effective governments will be at the gravest risk. Inequality in the world must cease as soon as possible.
828 million people go to bed hungry every night. The number of those facing acute food insecurity has soared from 135 million to 345 million since 2019.
Determining how to aid vulnerable nations facing future loss and damage is crucial. We must support one another by taking the steps to produce, manage, and make available the much-needed resources to meet each other’s needs.
Governments are letting humanity down — we need to take responsibility and speak the truth.
Without our world leaders and national governments collectively taking immediate aggressive, coordinated global action, it is invariably going to create an extraordinary amount of global suffering. Climate disruptions on a collision course for global destruction on a scale never seen before are imminent. Great Waves of Change are coming. (www.newmessage.org)
Being responsible for this planet means we must act; denial, inaction, and expecting others to solve the problem are unacceptable. We must all act now, being honest with ourselves and with each other. Ignoring evil is as bad as not taking action fighting evil.
Adapting our infrastructure, our economies and our lifestyle so we can live safely, sustainably and well in a climate-changed world. Even if all the greenhouse emissions stopped tomorrow. A great deal of climate damage has already happened, and will continue to happen regardless of our positive actions. The carbon already in the amotshpere will last for many decades.
If I had a pound for every time I heard people claim that the state of the planet's climate is natural — not caused by humans — I’d be rich. Do these people hear themselves? Do they hear these ignorant comments waiting for a bus or outside the school gates? It's nothing worse than gossip, but more damaging. Ignorance spreads like a decease.
What really baffles me is how easily people follow unverified opinions, bad ideas, reckless actions, and baseless gossip. Time and time again, history shows that major conflicts have been driven by blind loyalty to dangerous leaders, with little thought given to the bigger picture.
There’s a wealth of information available online, and it’s crucial to seek out reliable sources rather than blindly accepting what others say. Thoughtful communication, education, with engagement are key to spreading awareness. This includes what I am writing here now. Research what I write here. Find out for yourselves.
Using platforms like blogs, social media, and public discussions is a great way to encourage informed conversations. The accessibility of free media makes it easier than ever to share knowledge or challenging misconceptions. Bringing people together through meaningful dialogue can lead to real change. How do you envision making an impact in this space?
Embedding carbon impact details directly onto everyday essentials like food labels could be great for educating the average person. In 1990 there was a Nutrition Labeling and Education Act which mandated a Nutrition Facts Panel on most packaged foods. We should do the same for environmental facts. In would certainly grab people’s attention. People may not always seek out climate-related information, but if it’s placed in front of them in ways they can’t avoid, it might spark curiosity about the truth.
Bringing environmental awareness into daily life in unavoidable ways could shift public understanding. Whether it’s labeling food, integrating carbon footprints into consumer products, or making sustainability metrics more transparent, these small steps could lead to big changes over- time.
It is imperative that the common person speak up to be heard. Local election, democratic rights and voting, means nothing anymore. Public opinion may not matter to the governments, but it is slowly growing and finally being heard by some blue chip companies around our world.
Blue chip companies such as British Gas, Shell, ExxonMobil, BP, Chevron are among the biggest emitters of greenhouse gases. So Speak up! CEO’s of the largest organizations in the world are not entirely onboard. Even those that are on board are positioned to succeed, do not know for sure how the world will unfold.
ExxonMobil Blue Chip Example
Between 1977- 2003 some of the world’s top scientists were hired by the oil company, ExxonMobil. These same scientists predicted our current predicament of the global warming we now face. Were these scientists correct with this alarming accuracy? Probably yes! But Exxon spent the next two decades denying that climate science even existed.
In 2012, Rex Tillerson, ExxonMobil’s CEO, claimed that “Climate change is real, and that humanity would have to adapt to it”. In 2017 this man was later hand-picked by President Trump to be his “Secretary of State”, a position which involved Tillerson acting as a diplomat to represent the USA on occasions such as the Paris Agreement and other world climate change issues.
The Guardian newspaper wrote how this was the very man who had orchestrated the campaign to protect ExxonMobil, concealed the full impact of the danger that lay ahead for humanity. So government officials, or CEO’s are not to be trusted.
ExxonMobil denies locals their human rights
Exxon Mobil’s operation in the USA and Indonesia has involved drilling, fracking and refining operations. The effects of this have caused a series of negative impacts on the local villagers. Local villagers made legal claims against ExxonMobil for not respecting their human rights, torture, sexual abuse of pregnant women and spouses being shot dead. The case recently closed in 2021 after two decades of court battles.
We cannot rely on the world governments, the voting is fixed, promises constantly broken. Capitalism rules. Examples been, Elon Musk, Trump, Vladimir Putin are not interested in the world or humanity.
The power to stop this barbaric mistake in our planet’s history is not just in the hands of our world’s governments. The power is in the hands of the people, the public, the people that put them there. Wake up and continue fighting for this planet for the better future. It is then that we may stand a chance of staying free as humanity’s existence emerges through the Great Waves of change. (www.Newmessage.org)
Activists and Groups
Tens of thousands of people/campaigners from all walks of life united at a fantastic event, “The Big One”, where many activists and organizations came together to fight the climate emergency. Connect/summer 2023 Greenpeace.
The WWF marched in 2024 to raise awareness about environment issues. Other marches included ‘Restore Nature Now’ and the ‘March For Clean Water’, proving what the younger generations are thinking and feeling.
This is what we can accomplish when an unignorable mass movement of humans/people peacefully unites. The crucial point here is how together we still can change the course of our planet’s future.
Addressing loss and damage from climate change is not a luxury but a necessity. Defending the principle of multilateralism in climate negotiation is crucial for ensuring that all nations, however small, have a voice in addressing climate change.
IPCC states that climate change is “unequivocally” caused by humans and that temperatures may rise 1.5c above pre-industrial levels by 2050, if not sooner, this is even best-case scenario of deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions.
War created hunger, — human made climate disaster
There are 49 million people in 43 countries that are teetering on the edge of famine, yet we lose one third of food produced for human consumption globally. This amounts to about 1.3 billion tons per year. All the food produced but not eaten would feed two billion people. That’s more than twice the number of undernourished people across the world. The WFP (World Food Programme) has stated; “If wasted food were a country, it would be the third largest producer of carbon dioxide in the world”, (decomposing food produces carbon dioxide).
60% of the world’s undernourished people live in areas affected by conflict. In 2021 most of the 140 million people suffering acute hunger live in just ten countries: Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Haiti, Nigeria, Pakistan, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen.
Conflict is the key driver of hunger in most of the world’s food crises, from Sudan to Syria, from Yemen to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, pushing food and nutrition insecurity to historic levels. A sharp escalation of conflict in Palestine has seen hunger levels soar.
Existing Wars today — 2025
Ukraine homes destroyed through consistent bombing.
Ukraine provides food for 400 million people by exporting over 50% of its grain, so when Russia invaded Ukraine in July 2022, the market volatility occurred. The United Nations continue trying to get ports working so that the 36 dependent countries can import grain again. Failure to open the ports in the Odessa region is a declaration of war on global food security, which has caused famine, political destabilization, and mass migration. To those not directly involved in any part of the conflict, it is scandalous. Pakistanis, for example, are at substantial risk significant of going hungry because their country relies heavily on wheat and fertilizer from Ukraine.
United Nations find a way it to help displaced and starving families. Sudan (2025)
For Sudan, the ongoing fighting has continued, killing 13,900 people and displacing 8.1 million. Most are internally displaced, and over a million refugees have fled to neighboring countries. Sudan was already facing hunger because of poverty through climate disasters, but the conflict has plunged millions more into hunger. Because of rising food costs and disrupted infrastructure from the conflict, over 20 million people are now facing food insecurity.
Internal wars over the control of food and water, in Hati 2025)
Haiti has a long history of internal conflict. Compounded by recurring earthquakes and hurricanes, conflict has made Haiti the worst hunger crises in the world. In 2022, conflict gripped the country once again when local gangs began fighting each other for food and water control. The violence has escalated over the past year with civilians caught in the crossfire.
Mother and children seek home and food through displacement in Sahel in Africa. (2025)
The Sahel is a region in central Africa that includes Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger. Between 2020 and 2023, there were coups in all three countries. Since then, conflict has escalated between armed rebel groups and local militias. Over 4 million people have been displaced from the recent rise in violence.
This region is also vulnerable to extreme weather events like floods and droughts. Climate extremes and instability have created a hunger crisis in the region. The U.N. World Food Programme is delivering emergency food aid to people in the Sahel along with projects that help farmers restore land that was destroyed by extreme weather.
As social conditions change drastically, we will see the shift in dynamic leadership, along with the political foundations across the world. As the continents around the world become uninhabitable, there will be mass displacement, civil unrest and war, fighting for the control over resources, especially water.
In the future food will be far more difficult to grow, to distribute internationally will become a challenge. It will become imperative that we grow our own food where we can. Land will become scarce as it is built upon to house the ever-growing population of the planet.
Raping Mother Earth
Mining, agriculture, and livestock production continue with deforestation. World Resources Institute, state that millions of acres of rainforests have been cleared to make way for palm oil and soya farms, as well as cattle ranches for beef production. This destruction contributes to the release of billions of tons of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, trapping heat from the sun and causing global temperatures to rise.
Capitalism
Since 1978, about one million square kilometres of Amazon rainforest have been destroyed across Brazil, Peru, Colombia, Bolivia, Venezuela, Suriname, Guyana, and French Guiana.
The constant deforestation in Brazil is causing less rain, higher temperatures creating drought. Brazil has been subject to severe drought since 2021, as the Panama River Basin has suffered a severe decrease in water. This has caused 40 million people across Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay to go without food. This negative effect of no hydropower generation means they also have no or limited electricity supply.
Top scientists around the world do not want to rock the political boat because of the money that is being made. Capitalism breeds extinction. It is a collective activism problem where the people making money do not want to reform.
The battle against illegal gold mining in the Amazon is connected to a long list of ongoing problems. Excavators tear down trees’ devastating nature as it destroys habitats and fuels soil erosion. Mining then contaminates the landscape, as toxic mercury is used to find gold in the soil leading to lethal health problems. As the mercury leaks into the water supplies, infecting the Indigenous people's fish and crops.
Companies such as Hyundai have broken its links with illegal mining. It is because of Greenpeace’s consistent battle to protect our planet that the innocent life has been exposed as human greed. Through their continued battle against illegal gold mining, Greenpeace intends to make sure other companies do the same, and stop profiting from the crime of illegal gold mining in the Amazon Rain Forest.
Without Greenpeace holding corporations and governments to account, many of the environmental protections secured over the last five decades would not exist. (Connect Summer 2023
Oceans and Rivers
The oceans are polluted with our plastic, more recently micro plastic has been found in our fish and sea birds. Micro plastic has also been found in humans. Sewage with other general discarded waste in our oceans is finding ways into our drinking water.
As the Earth’s climate warms unnaturally fast, it affects the melting sea ice and glaciers. This dilutes the North Atlantic saltiness affecting the density of the sea’s water that drives the Gulf Stream. If the waters are not heavy enough to sink it, then the entire Gulf Stream could slow down or eventually shut down altogether.
The ocean is a significant influence on our planet’s weather and climate. With the ocean covering 70% of our global surface, it continuously exchanges heat, moisture and carbon with the atmosphere. This drives our weather patterns, influencing our current climate problem, exacerbating the human made negative impacts on our natural habitat. Over 90% of the planet's excess heat is absorbed by the oceans, contributing to significant warming.
Scientists say because of the extra C02 that has been pumped into the atmosphere, the ocean acidification has increased 30% compared to pre-industrial levels.
The fracking, ocean bed trawling and continuous over fishing ruins our oceans biodiversity. Scientists, along with policy experts, have proved beyond doubt that bottom trawling is causing a permanent biodiversity loss in some of the most scientifically important ecosystems on Earth, yet our governments refuse to put a stop to it.
Most of us now know that to mitigate the effects of climate change, it is necessary to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, shift to renewable energy sources, and implement measures to adapt to the effects that are already being felt. This can include transitioning to low carbon transportation, promoting energy efficiency, and protecting and restoring natural carbon sinks such as forests, permafrost and phytoplankton.
Phytoplankton plays the important role of performing photosynthesis on water. It converts the sun’s rays into energy that then takes in carbon dioxide to produce oxygen. This is how important these natural given sink tanks are.
Gigantic machines, weighing more than a blue whale, are lowered down to the ocean bed, desecrating the incredible marine wildlife with hydrothermal vents that support entire ecosystems. These include deep sea reefs that form the foundation of ocean food chains. This deep-sea mining will destroy these ecosystems forever, creating more damage than we are currently aware of. Scientists believe that 90% of deep-sea species are still undiscovered.
The impact of large-scale fracking is enormous. It creates air, water and noise pollution. Thousands of wells would be needed to produce just half of its gas demands. This would also require huge numbers of trucks delivering the required chemicals then taking away contaminated wastewater.
Fracking requires water, sand and chemicals to extract the gas and in the process uses more energy than the gas it produces provides. Also, the produced gas, which is a greenhouse gas, is liable to leak into the atmosphere more easily than conventional gas. There is also risk involved in producing it. Depending on the well size, 10,000 to 30,000 cubic metres of water are used in the U.K. which is enough to fill twelve Olympic swimming pools. The average fracking job in America uses approximately four million U.S. gallons of water per well. This is precious water that humanity will go to war for.
Organisations like Greenpeace have won victories by working together, demanding large companies take responsibility for their crimes. Such crimes as England fracking and Shell drilling in the Artic. It was through the bravery of volunteers scaling rigs, stopping ships, protesting with mass petitioning that stopped Shell from drilling in the Artic. It was the mounting and continuous pressure from local communities plus campaigns that placed a halt to fracking in England.
The Weather
There can be no more denying or hiding from the fact that global warming is supercharging extreme weather at an astonishing speed, which is affecting millions of lives throughout the planet. With evidence–based analysis from NASA since the 1970s, the influence of human activity on the warming of the climate system has developed from theory to established fact.
Earth’s climate has changed throughout history, but the current warming rate has not been witnessed in over 10,000 years. Scientific information taken from natural sources such as ice cores, rocks, tree rings, permafrost and ocean samples shows this can no longer be denied. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) state that, “with unequivocal evidence, human activity is to blame for accelerated climate change”.
A paper called “The Future of the Human Niche 2022” written by a leading world-class scientist wrote that because of one degree Celsius, one thousand million people will live in areas that are uninhabitable in approximately 15 years’ time and social collapse is inevitable without climate mitigation or human migration. The temperature experienced by most humans in the coming decade is projected to change more than it has over the past six millennia. This temperature comparison is between then and pre-industrial times (taken as 300y BP or 1650 C.E.) There is a slight discrepancy because of land warming much faster than oceans and human population growth being projected to be in predominantly hotter places.
Permafrost
Other recent studies show that permafrost carbon release has been poorly understood. 1,035 billion tons of organic carbon is stored in the upper three metres of the Artic permafrost soils, which is enough to overwhelm our ability to keep global temperatures below 2 Celsius.
Thawing of the permafrost also causes the release of methane gas, which has been stored for millions of years. When it resurfaces and goes into the atmosphere, it absorbs heat energy and then radiates it back to the Earth’s surface. Methane is 25 times more powerful than carbon dioxide by volume. So, the rising concentrations of methane in the Earth’s atmosphere are dramatic, causing the Earth’s surface temperature to increase.
Scientists have also found a link with increased amounts of methane, causing increased rain and flooding in some areas of the world. This rain is forming tropical wetlands which breed microbes that also liberate methane into the atmosphere. A methane feedback loop has been created.
This soil known as permafrost has remained frozen for years, lying beneath nine million square miles of the Earth’s surface. This covers a quarter of the landmass of the Northern Hemisphere, with Russia having the world’s largest share. The melting of the ice from the West and East Antarctic ice sheets, also glaciers, would result in sea levels rising. This level of rising would create disaster for over 680 million people who live near low-lying coastal areas.
This planet’s natural artic ecosystem makes the ground watertight and maintains vast networks of wetlands and lakes across the artic tundra. this also provides habitat for animals and plants. It currently stores around 1.5 trillion metric tons of organic carbon created by the remains of ancient life encased in its frozen soils for a hundred thousand years. This is twice as much as the Earth’s atmosphere currently holds.
Melting permafrost can release long-dormant bacteria, some of which could pose serious risks. In 2016, an anthrax outbreak in Siberia was linked to thawing permafrost that exposed a reindeer carcass carrying the bacteria. This led to infections causing some fatality. Scientists warn that some ancient microbes could survive re-emerging, potentially affecting populations with no natural immunity.
Science has proved beyond doubt that this is not a natural occurrence, and that the melting permafrost is not in equilibrium with the present climate. Some site measurements have shown that climate warming since the last third of the 19th century has caused depths to more than 100 metres (328ft) of permafrost to be unnaturally warm.
During a 1918 research to discover the elusive Spanish flue, John Hutlin discovered, buried in the subarctic permafrost, a corpse containing remnants of the elusive 1918 virus. The tissue Hultin retrieved from that corpse is now helping federal researchers unlock the microscopic secrets behind the pandemic, that wiped out millions worldwide, then vanished. Today’s scientists have been baffled by this.
Scientists also expect to find the bubonic plague and smallpox trapped beneath the surface of the Siberian ice along with other pandemics, plagues and infectious bacteria known only to the relics of time. But there is certainly no doubt that the warming of our climate is melting the ice sheets, permafrost, and soil above it, unleashing more threats than humanity is prepared for.
Another major contributor to this catastrophe is the melting of the ice-shelves, causing the rapid rising of our planet’s sea levels. Since 2018, studies have shown that the melt rate acceleration of the Antarctic ice sheet has tripled.
With 13,000 square miles already lost from Antartica’s ice shelf, we are running out of time. According to Ruth Mottram (phys.org/news.2023) a climate scientist at the Danish Meteorological Institute, the most recent figures are pretty disastrous, showing more and more of Greenland’s ice being lost. Studies have proved beyond doubt that the enhanced speed–up of the ice sheet’s melting is clearly caused by humans, which is causing climate change. There is nothing natural about this.
The effects of Antarctica, Greenland and any of the mountain glaciers melting around the world would cause the ocean to cover the majority of coastal cities, shrinking the planet’s land significantly.Afterword
Try as one might, it is extremely difficult to escape the carbon footprint. Your toothbrush, the clothes and shoes you send your kids to school in, the vacuum, the hairbrush and cooking utensils you use are all manufactured in a large carbon driven factory. 54 percent of the world’s energy production goes into production. It is vital that the manufacturing companies address their decarbonization options urgently.
With people being thrown into harsh and horrific circumstances, there will be tragedy, starvation, conflict, war, displacement, independent leaders and cults rising from the shadows. Many religious fanatics will believe it is judgment day, the second coming. God’s wrath is at hand. This is simply not true. Humanity’s downfall will be caused by humanity, not God.
People will be pushed to limits they have never encountered before. People will find their faith challenged. Those around us will see their family, friends and neighbours show their true colours. As the world takes on this chaotic, unpredictable, and in many places, dangerous environment, people will fight each other to find food, water and a place to stay or live. We will all become vulnerable.
Shelter of any kind will be harder and harder to find for many citizens in many cultures. Displacement will be on a scale not seen in our world before, and it won’t go back to how it was. These changes will be permanent. With countless irresolvable problems on a continuous and increasing scale, it will test humanity in ways that we cannot imagine.
Everything we know will fall apart as our institutions, governments fail to support the population. As charities, religious organisations are pushed to breaking point, there simply will not be enough provisions to go round. Food, medicines, water, fuel for the vehicles, irrigation water for home-grown vegetables. The large cooperations will cease to exist as we know them today. Super markets with their cold shelves, fridge freezers, and electricity output will no longer be an option. Water will be too scarce to be wasted on such luxuries.
The latest estimate shows the artic ice is melting so fast that by 2039 there is the likelihood that there will be no ice coverage at all for summers. For some nations, this is exciting because mineral extraction and transportation through what would normally be blocked with ice is made easily available. The negative side is mass flooding, displacement of millions of people, many of which are in poor countries like Bangladesh, India and Pakistan.
Afterword
Try as one might, it is extremely difficult to escape the carbon footprint. Your toothbrush, the clothes and shoes you send your kids to school in, the vacuum, the hairbrush and cooking utensils you use are all manufactured in a large carbon driven factory. 54 percent of the world’s energy production goes into production. It is vital that the manufacturing companies address their decarbonization options urgently.
With people being thrown into harsh and horrific circumstances, there will be tragedy, starvation, conflict, war, displacement, independent leaders and cults rising from the shadows. Many religious fanatics will believe it is judgment day, the second coming. God’s wrath is at hand. This is simply not true. Humanity’s downfall will be caused by humanity, not God.
People will be pushed to limits they have never encountered before. People will find their faith challenged. Those around us will see their family, friends and neighbours show their true colours. As the world takes on this chaotic, unpredictable, and in many places, dangerous environment, people will fight each other to find food, water and a place to stay or live. We will all become vulnerable.
Shelter of any kind will be harder and harder to find for many citizens in many cultures. Displacement will be on a scale not seen in our world before, and it won’t go back to how it was. These changes will be permanent. With countless irresolvable problems on a continuous and increasing scale, it will test humanity in ways that we cannot imagine.
All utilities that we take for granted will fall apart as our institutions and governments fail to support the population. As charities, religious organisations are pushed to breaking point, there simply will not be enough provisions to go round. Food, medicines, water, fuel for the vehicles, irrigation water for home-grown vegetables. The large cooperations will cease to exist as we know them today. Super markets with their cold shelves, fridge freezers, and electricity output will no longer be an option. Water will be too scarce to be wasted on such luxuries.
The latest estimate shows that the artic ice is melting so fast that by 2039 there is the likelihood that there will be no ice coverage at all for the artic summer. For some nations, this is exciting and good news because mineral extraction and transportation through what would normally be blocked with ice is made easy. The negative side is mass flooding, displacement of millions of people, many of which are in poor countries like Bangladesh, India and Pakistan.