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The following description of global change and the challenges we face was
taken from an APN sister network, the Inter-American Institute for Global
Change Research (IAI).
The Challenge of Global Change
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The state of our planet's environment
at any given instant is defined by a global system made up of many interacting
components that are constantly changing. Some changes take place over
days, months or years, others on time scales of centuries and eons. Some
occur over small areas of the earth's surface, while others affect large
regions or the whole planet.
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For most of the earth's history, the
principal components of this global system were the air, water, land,
and ice that comprise the physical environment of our planet and the
plants, animals, and humans living in that environment. Over the last
century, however, human activities have had an increasingly important
role in global environmental change.
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Human impacts on the environment have increased enormously
as the world's population has grown and the scale of human activities such
as industry, agriculture, and extraction of natural resources has increased.
Industrial emissions into the atmosphere can influence climate. Changes
in land use, such as clearing forests for agricultural production, can
disrupt natural ecosystems and affect the chemistry of the atmosphere.
Human activities affect the environment, and human life and society are affected
in many important ways by changes in the global environmental system. Droughts
cause crop failures, food shortages, malnutrition and starvation. Persistent
drought can turn fertile agricultural land into desert. Shifts in ocean circulation
and temperature affect the productivity of fisheries. Melting of polar ice could
raise ocean levels enough to threaten coastal cities. Climate variability may
bring more severe storms and increased loss of lives and property to some regions
and more benign weather to others.
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Global environmental change is one of the greatest
challenges that humanity faces today. Those who make policy and
decisions for our society need better tools to help them face this
challenge. Those tools must be forged through improved understanding of
the behavior of the global system that defines the environment of our
planet and the options that are available for responding to changes in
this complex system. |
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