The consequences of global warming
The so-called global warming is caused by the continuous accumulation of the greenhouse effect, which leads to the imbalance of the energy absorbed and emitted by the earth and gas system. As a result, the energy continuously accumulates in the earth and gas system, leading to the temperature rise and global warming.
The consequences of global warming, from natural disasters to the breakdown of biological chains, involve all aspects of nature and human survival:
1. Global temperature rise brings a large amount of heat energy, which provides tremendous kinetic energy to the air and oceans, forming large, even super-large typhoons, hurricanes, tsunamis and other disasters. Extreme weather and climate events often occur.
2. Rising temperatures will not only suck water directly from the sea, but also from the land, leading to a large area of inland drought and a large area of grain production. Food and meat will face a shortage, a direct threat to human survival.
3.Melting icebergs from rising temperatures are the primary source of fresh water on which we depend. Much of our underground fresh water reserves come from iceberg meltwater. But global warming is making ice and icebergs accumulate faster than they can melt, and some are no longer accumulating, cutting off local sources of fresh water for drinking. At the same time, melting icebergs make sea level rise, causing the loss of coastal wetlands, mangroves, coral reefs and other ecological groups, coastal land salinization and so on, resulting in the imbalance of the natural ecological environment of coasts and bays.