Showing posts with label disaster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disaster. Show all posts

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Global Climate Change Exacerbates Worldwide Food Shortage - http://clapway.com/2015/08/09/global-climate-change-food-shortage-101/

It goes without saying that no one should suffer nonconsensual malnutrition, or–more bleakly–starve to death. But despite world governments’ working to reduce world hunger through the U.N. with the support of global philanthropic charities, there are many still suffering from food shortage, and global climate change is only exacerbating the effects of this worldwide tragedy.


SOME FAVORED LOCALES OF WORLD HUNGER


This May alone, 23 of Tanzania’s 25 regions had enough food to viably survive the summer, said Deputy Minister for Agriculture, Food Security and Cooperatives Godfrey Zambi. He goes on to make the case to local media; “[i]t is only a small part of the country which faces shortage of food and the food we have is enough for all of them.”


Zambi continues, saying that until May 7th of 2015, the National Food Reserve Agency had 463,180.42 tons of maize, 5,710.27 tons of sorghum and 4,342.7 tons of rice reserved across the country.


A LITTLE LATE FOR WARNING


But Zambi made this announcement and implicit plea for help long before this year’s harvest season began. The present climate and food production levels of the nation make it obvious that many people are going to suffer from food shortage. The merciless weather has caused unusually long periods of droughts and equally long rainfall and floods that have forced the nation into a period of chronically reduced crop production.


These impoverished conditions are not limited to Zambia. Tanzania was projected to begin its own period of dangerous food shortage this June, and, globally, a report by FAO hypothesized that world hunger is presently affecting 805 million people, despite existent international efforts to reduce this great plight to humanity.


FORMERLY IMPOVERISHED NATIONS’ RECOVERIES ARE SOON TO BE TRAVESTIES


According to the Global Hunger Index 2014, 26 developing countries reduced their score by 50%. This means that Angola, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Chad, Ghana, Malawi, Niger, Rwanda, Thailand and Vietnam have all made incredibly significant progress reducing their respective populations’ food needs.


However, the threat of future food shortage is growing stronger and closer in time than we as a global community previously thought because of the accelerating progress of global climate change.


GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE EXACERBATES EXTREME WEATHER


In a recent report made by Grantham Mayo van Otterloo (GMO), humanity is coming precariously close to suffering a total breakdown of food systems linked to warming, drought, flooding and precipitation, which, if you haven’t kept track of extreme weather phenomena over the past twenty-five years (or even the past decade), are becoming more of a variable every single year.


The GMO report cites the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), and goes on to say that global climate change doesn’t just cause short-term food shortages, but actually alters the way food is produced worldwide, pushing food prices even higher, which only exacerbates the social antagonism of world hunger.

The Global Sustainability Institute (GSI) of Angilia Ruskin University published a report in June predicting that by the year 2040 the price of food will be four times higher than they were in 2000. The GMO report noted that this is twice today’s price to eat.


“The results show that based on plausible climate trends, and a total failure to change course, the global food supply system would face catastrophic losses, and an unprecedented epidemic of food riots,” warned Aled Jones, the institute’s director, in an article recently published by Business Insider. “In this scenario, global society essentially collapses as food production falls permanently short of consumption,” Jones laments.


IT’S TIME TO WAKE UP


In case you’re wondering if this is simply leftist fear-mongering, or the result of uncritical, picayune reporting; food production is reduced by rising temperatures because global climate change forces farmers to change their most fundamental farming methods. This is because they are always planning for subsequent seasons, and not simply holding on to past traditions for kinship’s sake, or whatever. In fact, according to the IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report from 2014, every single decade of general warming that occurs decreases the total quantity of food the world is able to produce by 2%, which is roughly 4.86 million tons.


This is just the tip of the poverty-laden apocalyptic iceberg we’re facing as a global community. For more projected statistics of how global climate change will threaten our ability to eat, please consider the IPCC’s report linked here.



 


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Global Climate Change Exacerbates Worldwide Food Shortage

Sunday, August 2, 2015

Wreckage from the Challenger and Columbia disaster Now Viewable - http://clapway.com/2015/08/02/wreckage-from-the-challenger-and-columbia-disaster-now-viewable586/

A Sad Moment in Time


Space exploration was barely conceivable in the sixties, twenty years later in the eighties, it was more of a reality. However, Space exploration came with its own risks. Such risks resulted in fatalities and families and friends with no closure. This was the case for the members of the Challenger disaster in 1986. It was near the end of January when the Challenger was set to launch. The tragic disaster happened 73 seconds after liftoff when two O-rings failed due to cold weather. The O-rings were designed to help separate the sections of the rocket booster to get the Challenger up into space. That day, despite the warnings issued to officials about the potential dangers the weather may present to the equipment, the Challenger was launched. The explosion killed the team of astronauts and a teacher selected to teach children from space. The crew on the ground, and those watching the live launch around the nation, watched the horrific event until the end after it plunged into the ocean.


The Columbia disaster


After that tragic day, many didn’t expect another accident to occur, but the tragedy continued. Which is why the Columbia disaster was such a surprise in the twenty-first century. The launch was set to lift off again in January 2003 to do some experimentation with microgravity. The trip would last seventeen days, and The launch went fine. however, the reentry was another story. On February 1st, 2003 the Columbia had a breach that occurred during the launch when the falling foam hit the panels on the underside of the left wing.


Life after tragedy


Seven people lost their lives that day fifteen minutes before returning home, before making contact with the ground. And so, another tragedy in NASA’s history went down in history. Today, 2015, some pieces of wreckage recovered from those two disastrous missions, are being put on display at the exhibit at the Kennedy Space Center for public viewing. This will be the first time in the history of both these missions where many can view the artifacts after being in storage for so long. The purpose is to show how the astronauts lived their life, rather than focus on the moment of their death.



 


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Wreckage from the Challenger and Columbia disaster Now Viewable