A new United Nations report sheds light on grim prospects for the planet if world leaders don’t act to curb climate change and its catastrophic impacts. The report includes particularly troubling predictions about the future of climate-induced conflict.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a body of experts assembled by the U.N. to represent 195 governments, said in its report Monday that “climate change has caused substantial damages, and increasingly irreversible losses, in terrestrial, freshwater and coastal and open ocean marine ecosystems.” The impacts of climate change are “larger than estimated in previous assessments,” according to the report.
The report includes an intricate, regional breakdown of how climate issues will rear themselves on every continent.
“Any further delay in concerted anticipatory global action on adaptation and mitigation will miss a brief and rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a livable and sustainable future for all,” the report stated.
Some of their most dire warnings concerned the conflicts that could arise in a climate-afflicted world, where communities are forced to compete for increasingly scarce resources such as food, water and shelter. That’s the very fear I wrote about in a ReidOut Blog post in November.








