SINGAPORE - Apocalyptic orange-coloured skies filled with choking smoke and ash, communities fleeing raging firestorms driven by freakishly hot and windy weather, thousands of homes and livelihoods reduced to ruins.
The crises might seem far from Singapore, but climate change could also affect fires that burn closer to home. No matter where those emissions are, whether from the industries on Jurong Island, coal plants in China or cars all around the world, it all goes into one common atmosphere, which is trapping more and more heat.All it took were lightning strikes to trigger epic fires that fire-fighters struggled for months to contain, killing 33 people nationally, burning millions of hectares and destroying thousands of homes in a multi-billion-dollar calamity.
The UN's leading climate science body, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change , has for years been alerting the world about the growing risks from climate change, and especially the need to limit global warming. "We are seeing the emergence of some signals that would have had almost no chance of happening without human-induced climate change," Professor Sonia Seneviratne, a climate scientist at Swiss university ETH Zurich, told Reuters.
Source: Energy Industry News (energyindustrynews.net)
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