Warning of global warming: The average temperature of the earth will rise by 1.5 degrees


The current red light for mankind: a worrying report from the United Nations

As the Indian Ocean heats up rapidly, heatwaves and floods are likely to intensify in India: UN

Geneva: The UN Intergovernmental Panel issued its sixth assessment report. That report is very worrying for the world. Like the last warning of global warming, the report said that the Earth's temperature would rise by 1.5 degrees faster than previously thought. Previously given by the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change eight years ago. The report said that it was mankind who destroyed the earth.

According to a report by the UN Climate Panel, the Earth's temperature was expected to rise by 1.5 or 2 degrees by the end of the 21st century, but now it will rise in the next one and a half to two decades. When the Paris Agreement was signed in 2015, leaders of 200 countries signed an agreement that efforts would be made to ensure that the average global temperature before industrial development did not rise by 1.5 degrees.

Because even before that, in the 20th century, the average temperature of the earth increased by 1.1 degrees. According to the latest UN report, the average temperature of the earth will increase by 1.5 degrees around 2030 or before 2040. It is too late to stop it now. The report says that only mankind is responsible for this situation.

More concern was expressed in the context of India. As the Indian Ocean heats up rapidly, heatwaves, heatwaves and floods in India will intensify in the next decade. The impact of global warming on the Indian Ocean is increasing compared to all other oceans.

The sixth UN assessment report, Climate Change-2021, said rising sea levels would cause frequent floods in coastal areas and increase the risk of hurricanes. Because of this the sea level is rising.

The number of hurricanes in the Arabian Sea increased by 52% as applied to Gujarat

Scientists from the Meteorological Department concluded in a study that the number of hurricanes in the Arabian Sea has increased by 52 percent in the last two decades. A study of data from 1982 found that the number of hurricanes in the Arabian Sea increased by 52 percent a year two decades ago. Fortunately, many of these hurricanes are scattered across the ocean, but if the situation continues, all of these hurricanes will start hitting the earth.

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