Earth Day – the statistics

The numbers are in and they aren’t good. Here are some facts and figures to ponder this Earth Day.

Arrow Red

1.9 F since 1880

Global temperature

 

 

 

Arrow Blue

12.85% per decade

Arctic ice is declining

 

 

800 million people

11% of the world’s population is currently vulnerable to climate change impacts such as droughts, floods, heat waves, extreme weather events and rising sea levels.

 

1 million hectares lost

An area of coastal ecosystems larger than New York City is destroyed every year, removing an important buffer from extreme weather for coastal communities and releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

 

Save nature: It’s cheaper

Conserving ecosystems is often more cost-effective than human-made interventions. In the Maldives, building a sea wall for coastal protection cost about US$2.2 billion. Even after 10 years of maintenance costs, it is still four times cheaper to preserve the natural reef.

Extreme Events

Since 1950, the number of record-high temperature events in the United States has been increasing, while the number of record-low temperature events has been decreasing. The U.S. also has witnessed increasing numbers of intense rainfall events.

 

412 parts per million

Carbon dioxide levels in the air are the highest in 650,000 years.

 

The Amazon is a carbon-storing powerhouse

In the Amazon, 1% of tree species sequester 50% of the region’s carbon.

 

Arrow Orange

3.3 millimeters per year

The sea level is rising.

 

Arrow Green 2

 

 

413 gigatons per year

Ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland 

 

Sources: Conservation International, NASA

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑