See 6 Ways Climate Change Will Affect You
Published 8 Nov 2017, 18:04 GMT, Updated 11 Nov 2017, 00:56 GMT
Photograph by Marcio Jose Sanchez, Ap
More energy demand, higher prices, more climate change.
The worldwide trend is stunning. Since 1970, global demand for heating has decreased, while demand for cooling has shot up. Higher temperatures over the next decade, mixed with a growing global population, will continue to increase energy demand, accelerating the loop of emissions that cause climate change that cause more emissions.
Rainfall, meanwhile, is projected to decline by up to 40 percent in some places. Less water, a key ingredient in power production, will constrain energy generation systems. What's more, government analysts anticipate that a higher projected chance of flooding in certain areas will risk inundating power generators and disrupting transmission routes.
Photograph by Long Yudan, Imaginechina, ApAgeing transportation infrastructures won't mix well with extreme weather.
Large storms and extreme weather have already shown their might. The impact on transport infrastructure won't be pretty, on a par with superstorm Sandy's destruction in 2012. But scientists expect similar scenarios to increase in regions that will become more vulnerable to changing weather.
Several U.S. states, including Vermont, Tennessee, Iowa, and Missouri, have already experienced severe weather that damaged roads, bridges, and railroad tracks. Some engineers worry that heavy demands on ageing infrastructure can create unreliable routes for the transport of vital commodities like food, fuel, and water.
Photograph by Julio Cortez, ApDroughts will become more common virtually everywhere.
The world has a finite amount of water, and new demands, especially from a growing population, will stretch that supply. Watersheds in the southwestern U.S., including the Rockies and the Rio Grande (pictures), will encounter supply problems as the runoff that replenishes them declines. Perhaps worse, longer droughts in formerly fertile regions will mean less certainty for farmers and water-dependent industries. (Learn about Rocky Mountain National Park.)
Photograph by Susan Montoya Bryan, ApCases of allergies and asthma will continue to rise.
Prepare yourself for dirtier air (pictured). Climate change is expected to increase atmospheric ozone—widely known to lead to decreased lung function—up to ten parts per billion. Cases of asthma are expected to jump by up to 10 percent in urban areas such as London. Longer pollen seasons will lead to more air-based allergies, scientists say, and with increasing carbon dioxide, the pollen count could nearly double from 2000 levels.
Photograph by Liu Yang, Imaginechina, ApCities could become more dangerous than suburban areas.
Cities have become more attractive since 2000, owing mainly to the proximity of major conveniences. But there's a big downside. Natural disasters wrought by climate change—such as increased hurricanes and more severe storms—mean that any disruption could impact millions of people's lives. Only some cities have devised plans to deal with these events. Shutting down New York City's subway system and issuing advance evacuation orders to some parts of New York and New Jersey in advance of superstorm Sandy is thought to have saved thousands of homes and lives.
Photograph by Craig Ruttle, ApPhotograph by Paul Nicklen