Topic > Essay on climate change - 1647

Climate change and heritage loss The melting of Antarctica's ice and accelerating sea level rise, the increasing number of large fires, intense shock waves heat, severe droughts and blizzards, disruptions and decreases in food supplies, and extreme storms Events are increasing in many areas of the world, and these are just some of the consequences of global warming. The fossil fuels we burn for energy, coal, natural gas and oil, as well as forest loss due to deforestation in the Southern Hemisphere, all contribute to climate change. For the last three decades, every single year has been warmer than the previous year and the 12 warmest years have been recorded since 1998. We are overloading our atmosphere with carbon dioxide and trapping heat and recently the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has reached 400 pm. Not only are environmental issues increasing due to rising carbon dioxide, but more and more diverse problems are emerging as climate change becomes more severe. For example, regional models and local analyzes agree that Mongolia has become significantly warmer and that the effect of climate change is damaging its historic thousand-year-old nomadic lifestyle, even approaching the brink of extinction. Mongolian nomadic pastoralists have become extremely vulnerable to many unusual climate impacts and extreme temperature fluctuations that have led to inadequate grazing and the loss of huge numbers of livestock, often facing hostile environmental conditions that have led to entrenched pastoral poverty. This essay focuses on how climate change impacts the qualitative and quantitative value of indigenous culture and nomadic lifestyle, and how the economy struggles with the scale of massive migration of nomads to urban areas while failing to valorize the extent of mass migration of nomads to urban areas. half of the document ......resilience and capacity of the government to enhance the heritage and of the people who are committed to preserving it. Regarding the ambition to monetise the full range of impacts caused by climate change and to add apps all The depth of the consequences of the numbers tells how people have lost their sense of ecological quality and cultural heritage unless they are converted into fictitious numeric values. As mentioned in Frank Ackerman's article, our moral obligation to protect the lives and livelihoods of voters and our future generations is a numbers game, and therefore loses all meaning because when the economy starts functioning efficient and starts to fill the gaps in the market monetary values, everything will seem normal, but the truth is that any estimate of costs and profits does not solve the main general environmental and cultural damages.