Changing our own behavior can
limit climate change: By switching to energy sources that don't release
greenhouse gases, increasing the energy efficiency of our homes and offices,
and driving less, we can reduce our effect on the climate and limit climate
change.
The two most important strategies for addressing
climate change are mitigation and adaptation. The two strategies are
related and overlap to a degree, but the basic distinction is that mitigation
means limiting the amount of climate change which occurs, primarily by reducing
greenhouse gas concentrations, while adaptation means changing the way we as a
society live in response to the changing climate.
Mitigation to
reduce greenhouse gas emissions entails the reduction and conservation of oil,
gas, and coal, the fossil fuels that are used in transportation, heating and
cooling, agriculture, and electricity generation. Replacing carbon-intensive
fuels with renewable and alternative energy sources is key to “decarbonising”
the current energy infrastructure, which will require transforming the global
economy that is currently fuelled primarily by carbon-based energy sources. In
order for mitigation to be successful, it is necessary to understand how humans
currently consume energy and how that impacts the climate, and then make
appropriate decisions to minimize that impact. There are already a number of
energy sources which produce electricity at costs comparable to coal and
natural gas, and improving the efficiency and availability of those
technologies is a major area of research. Many private homeowners and schools
generate their own electricity with solar panels or wind turbines, showing
students and their neighbours that these technologies are available and
affordable. Simple measures to increase household energy efficiency, to drive
less by biking, carpooling, and riding public transit, and to ship our food
shorter distances all play important roles in averting future climate change.
Adapting to climate change is also crucial since,
no matter how successful mitigation efforts are; the changes already occurring
are predicted to increase in the years and decades to come, requiring serious
planning to minimize risks, vulnerabilities, and impacts. Adaptation strategies
that communities are already implementing include:
- Building sea walls and moving away from
vulnerable coasts in order to avoid sea level rise and storm surges
- Diversifying crops and using drip irrigation
for agriculture
- Building new public works such as sewers,
bridges and aqueducts to handle changes in rainfall and flooding
- Training public health professionals for
increased health impacts and emerging diseases
- Developing wildlife conservation plans and new
migration corridors to protect endangered species
- Designing buildings to conserve and even
generate energy, and
- Demonstrating strategies and lifestyles for
increased sustainability and resilience
Because there is a lag between increased greenhouse
gas emissions and increased warming, even if all greenhouse gas emissions
stopped today, it would take decades before temperatures, rainfall, and other
effects of human-caused climate change would begin to abate. So adaptation and
mitigation will inevitably proceed in parallel.
Climate change will affect every part of society.
The response to climate change — through mitigation and adaptation — has to
involve individuals and families at home, students and educators in schools,
leaders and workers in organizations, and local, state, national and international
governmental bodies. The actions we take and decisions we make can create
opportunities or limit the options for the next generation. Ideally, by
reducing the effects and adapting to climate change, the present generation
will improve its own condition, with benefits such as a higher quality of life
and public health, while helping future generations through its foresight and
planning.
Thank you!
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