6 Things You Can Do to Avoid Climate Catastrophe
Deutsche Welle
Oct. 11, 2018 11:29AM EST
Ken Fager / Flickr / CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
6 Things You Can Do to Avoid Climate Catastrophe
By Katharina Wecker
https://www.ecowatch.com/things-you-can-do-to-avoid-climate…
We've already warmed the world about 1 degree Celsius (1.8
degrees Fahrenheit) since pre-industrial times—with disastrous effects. Sea
levels are rising, coral reefs are dying, species are going extinct and extreme
weather is on the increase.
A new report by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) reveals what life on Earth would look like if
temperatures were to rise another 0.5 to 1.5 degrees Celsius. It also paints a
picture of what a 2-degree warmer world would look like.
In the report, more than 90 scientists from 40 countries
agree that it's still possible to remain under 1.5 degrees of global warming—at
least technologically—and outlined what we must do to make that happen.
However, a lot of political will be required.
But there are also things that normal people can do to avoid
climate catastrophe. Here are six concrete ways you can take action on climate
change.
1. Change Your Energy Provider
The majority of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere come from
burning coal, oil and natural gas.
In Germany, brown coal (or lignite) is responsible for a
fifth of the country's CO2 emissions.
So a major step toward reducing greenhouse gases is to
replace fossil fuels with renewable energies.
In many countries, you can pick your energy provider.
Consider switching to one that provides energy from renewables like wind,
solar, hydropower or sustainable bioenergy—check to make sure the energy
company and renewable sources are independently certified.
2. Eat Less Meat
What ends up on your plate makes another big difference.
In a 2013 report, the United Nations' Food and Agricultural
Organization (FAO) found that 14.5 percent of all human-induced greenhouse gas
emissions came from the livestock sector.
That is more than all cars, ships, planes and other forms of
transport throughout the world combined. Of those emissions, 41 percent are
caused by beef production; milk production makes up another 19 percent.
Avoiding meat and dairy products is the single simplest way
to reduce your environmental impact on the planet, suggested a study released
this year in the journal Science.
Getting your protein from beef instead of plants produces at
least six times more greenhouse gases and uses 36 times more land.
The study also revealed the importance of how the food is
produced. For example, beef raised on deforested land results in 12 times more
greenhouse gases than those grazing on existing pasture.
So if you do eat meat, get it from local organic farms if
possible.
3. Waste Less Food
Agriculture accounts for a quarter of greenhouse gas
emissions, but about a third of all food grown on this planet never actually
gets eaten.
Of course, not all of this goes into the waste bin—the
European Parliament reckons about half of EU food waste takes place at home,
the rest is lost along the supply chain or never harvested from the fields—but
home is a simple starting point.
Food waste translates into a carbon footprint of a whopping
3.3 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2), according to the United
Nations—amounting to more than India's annual emissions.
An easy solution: Buy less and make sure eat it all.
4. Take a Train Instead of Flying
Flying harms the climate in several ways.
Many estimates put aviation's share of global CO2 emissions
at just above 2 percent—but other aviation emissions such as nitrogen oxides
(NOx), water vapor, particulates, contrails and cirrus changes contribute to
additional warming effects.
Cut out a single roundtrip and you could save anywhere from
700 to 2,800 kilograms of CO2, depending on the distance traveled, fuel
efficiency of the aircraft and weather conditions.
To put that into perspective: According to Eurostat, the
average European emits about 900 kilograms of CO2 per year.
If you do fly, consider offsetting your carbon
emissions—through a reliable, certified offsetting scheme.
5. Just Consume Less
Natural resources are limited.
We deplete local resource stocks through overfishing and
overharvesting forests, and harm the climate by emitting more carbon dioxide
into the atmosphere than ecosystems can absorb.
Most countries use more natural resources than the planet
can regenerate within a year. In Germany, we would need 1.7 planets per year to
support our consumption levels as they are today.
But not all countries are equally to blame for overshooting
our natural budget. Higher-income countries use far more resources per year
than lower-income countries.
Worldwide, fossil fuels are the main culprit of our resource
overshoot—and responsible for high CO2 emissions. In order to live within the
means of our planet, we need to radically rethink our consumption patterns.
Do you really need that new smartphone, or discounted dress?
Reducing our environmental footprint means buying fewer
products, buying products that last longer, recycling whenever possible
and—best of all—reusing as much as we can. Circular economy, baby!
6. Take Collective Action
Many believe the most important thing individuals can do is
form groups and take collective action. Bill McKibben, a veteran climate
activist and a leading voice for civil society movements to protect the planet,
is very vocal on this point.
While individual actions like changing behavior feed into
the bigger fight against global warming, that's no longer enough considering
how climate change has taken on such worrying dimensions, McKibben says.
So to really make a difference, people should join together
with others in movements that are big and broad enough to actually change
government policy.
Reposted with permission from our media associate Deutsche
Welle.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário