REALITIES OF CLIMATE
CHANGE
Jude Nuru
February 12, 2015
From an environmental viewpoint, climate
change can be regarded as global warming and
everything else that the increasing of
greenhouse gas levels will affect. From this
perspective, it is undeniably clear that the
phenomenon of climate change is global and
as such, the fight against this debilitating
canker requires no less an action than a
globally concerted effort. This therefore
means that no single nation, regardless of
how well-intended and comprehensive her
environmental policies may have been, cannot
succeed in waging a lone-ranger war against
climate change in isolation. In other words,
any approach to tackling the problem of
climate change requires a high level
international cooperation as this will
potentially lower overall costs and becomes
more effective than if individual nations
were to act in isolation.
Despite enough evidence to support the
incidence of climate change, some
individuals and even some organizations
still question the realities of climate
change. While a negligible fraction of these
people may be genuinely ignorant about the
concept of climate change, a greater chunk
of them have deliberately turned a blind eye
to it mainly as a result of the seemly
economic benefits they stand to reap from
their engagement in hostile and
unsustainable environmental practices.
Indeed, there is some level of consensus
among a good number of scientists that
climate change is caused by anthropogenic
activities with the most significant one
being the burning of fossil fuels. It is an
undisputable fact that, a lot of the global
economic successes, especially those in the
developed world, had been achieved largely
due to the dependence on fossil fuels, as
was the case during the industrial
revolution.
However, the over reliance on fossil fuels
for economic development cannot continue
without any appropriate technological
intervention coming in to stem the tide. In
fact, an engagement in any economic activity
which is deemed hostile to the environment
is reprehensible and must be vigorously
renounced as the realities of climate change
have become manifest everywhere and are no
longer questionable. As a matter of fact, no
one, regardless of his /her location, can
claim to be oblivion of the signs and
effects of climate change that have become
pervasive and having devastating impact on
the environment and human health.
Indeed, ample evidence abounds to
corroborate scientists’ belief about climate
change. One clear evidence of climate change
is unprecedented global temperature rise. In
the last couple of years, countries
throughout the globe have unilaterally
witnessed abnormal temperatures in and
around their regions, with those countries
found along the tropical areas being the
greatest recipient of this negative
actuality of climate change. As indicated
earlier, the impact of climate change can be
very devastating with dire environmental
consequences, as well as negative health
implications on populations as people can
die due to excessive heat or cold. There is
absolutely no room for impartiality
regarding the negative impact of climate
change on the lives of people, since
everyone is at risk of being affected by the
attendant consequences of it. All ecological
zones have had a bitter experience with
climate change irrespective of their global
location. Those in the temperate zones have
had their fair share of climate change.
According to the UK MET Office, for example,
during the summer of 2003, excessive
temperatures around 38.50 C hit Europe
causing an estimated 35,000 deaths across
the continent. In the tropical locales, the
impact of climate change is mostly felt
through extended drought periods often
leading to low yields and poor harvest, thus
ushering in an unpleasant human condition of
famine. Moreover, the excessive heat being
experienced in parts of the world,
especially the tropics, have compelled
inhabitants of such areas to procure air
conditioners which are run non-stop to
lessen the impact of the unbearable heat.
This practice has in turn led to an
astronomical rise in energy consumption,
further weakening the already-burdened
energy generation capacity of some of these
countries. No wonder Ghana is currently
experiencing a period of prolonged energy
crisis. The power generator, VRA attributes
this situation to low water level at the
Hydro-Dam at Akosombo. An undeniable reality
of the situation, however, is that climate
change is undoubtedly responsible for the
low water level in the dam.
Another obvious deadly reality of climate
change which has had far-reaching
ramifications on the ecological system in
recent years has been unprecedented
flooding. Most people that have been living
in areas that experienced the unpleasant
incident of flooding as an offshoot of
climate change have had their entire homes
submerged in heavy pool of water. In the
midst of the flooding, precious lives and
valuable possessions are usually lost.
In recent times, the agricultural sector had
witnessed significant deviations in terms of
drastic changes that have occurred in the
rainfall pattern in some regions across the
globe. This situation has made it difficult
for farmers, more especially peasant
farmers, to plan their farming activities
appropriately. Oftentimes, there are serious
disruptions to the seasons during which
certain crops thrive well. Consequently,
some traditional high yielding crops are
being phased out gradually, since the
prevailing climatic conditions can no longer
support their very existence. This situation
has often impacted negatively on the overall
earnings of some subsistent farmers, thereby
affecting their standard of living and
ultimately their quality of life. In the
northern part of Ghana, for example, farmers
used to start preparing their arable lands
around March and start sowing early crops
around April. This is no longer the case, as
the rains delay unduly forcing them to
commence their farming activities sometime
in June. The end result is poor harvest,
thereby worsening their
already-underprivileged situation and hence
poverty becomes an endemic social problem in
that part of the country.
Once the entire ecological system has been
suffering from the harsh realities of
climate change, animal life is inescapable.
Some animal species have become extinct due
to an irreparable damage caused to their
hitherto natural habitat by the harsh
realities of climate change. In the past,
some tropical birds and butterflies that
used to serve as harbingers regarding
important seasons and times during the year,
which literally presented a form of a
calendar to the rural folks to begin
preparing for some crucial activities, have
all become extinct. Dejectably, not only are
animals deprived of their bona fide God
given habitat in the wake of climate change,
they are in most cases deprived of their
basic livelihood, as green grass and other
sources of subsistence for animals become
non-existent for them to forage.
In a nutshell, ample evidence abounds to
support scientists’ belief about climate
change. Climate change is manifested in
ozone layer depletion, hurricane (Katrina
and Rita), sea level rise, global
temperature rise, warming oceans, shrinking
ice sheets, declining arctic sea ice,
glacial retreat, extreme events,
changes in activities of birds and flowers,
just to mention a few. With all these
negative unconventional events staring
humanity right in the face, the question of
the realities of climate change has
therefore become anachronistic. A relevant
and fashionable question that must be
ringing in peoples’ ears instead is how to
fight this multi-faceted canker, since it
does have negative social, economic, and
environmental implications. The good news,
however, is that we are reliably informed by
scientists that the activities of human
beings are the very cause of climate change.
This therefore means that humans hold the
keys to solving the problem of climate
change and can assuredly fight it through
various energy and environmental policy
initiatives. As clearly outlined from the
beginning, the fight against it cannot be
done in isolation by individual nations. The
effort required to fight it more effectively
and judiciously is a globally concerted one.
In this regard, environmental sustainability
and sustainable development must supersede
all else and remain major human
preoccupations.
By Jude Nuru
The Writer is an Energy and Environmental
Policy Professional and can be contacted via
email: nurujude@yahoo.com, and mobile:
+233502179321 |