HOT TOPIC OF THE WEEK
CLIMATE CHANGE
1. LA NACION
MOVILIZACIÓN MUNDIAL 🗺️ POR LA CRISIS CLIMÁTICA— LA NACION Data (@LNdata) September 27, 2019
➡️ Conocé todos los focos de concentración y encontrá el más cercano a tu hogar📍
👉https://t.co/ohwrGzPUwa #27S #27SHuelgaMundialPorElClima #GlobalClimateStrikes @biancapallaro @FlorRAltube @LNCreativa @Delfibertolotti pic.twitter.com/lPBUAhJrGU
2. REUTERS GRAPHICS
More than a third of the indians lives in water-stressed areas. An increasing population and inadequate surface water is fast depleting the country of its groundwater resources. Reuters Graphics visualized in a longform the use of groundwater by district in India. More than 100 districts used more groundwater than what was replenished by both natural and artificial processes, a measurement known as groundwater “recharge”.An increasing population and inadequate surface water is fast depleting India of its groundwater resources. https://t.co/ihzYsafSIN— Reuters Graphics (@ReutersGraphics) September 25, 2019
2. WASHINGTON POST
Across America, climate change is already disrupting lives. US are 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than a century ago and americans are affected by it. This is the story of the Rio Grande, its farmers and growndwater.Rising temperatures are forcing farmers along the Rio Grande to tap shrinking groundwater. https://t.co/4MEaOT34t9 pic.twitter.com/IDv5xm5Wp5— Post Graphics (@PostGraphics) September 27, 2019
4. FINANCIAL TIMES
It seems that sea levels are rising faster than scientists had predicted. The Financial Times team started from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the UN climate summit in New York to analyze the meltwater from Greenland, Antarctica and glaciers and their effects to the sea levels.Landmark UN report lays bare severe risk to coastal cities and low-lying islands as polar ice melts and sea level rise accelerates report https://t.co/FIw0OmyfhL pic.twitter.com/GBtacWdN5k— FT Data (@ftdata) September 25, 2019
5. BBC NEWS
Why are more fleeing home than ever before? This is not an article completely related to the climate change. But alongside violence, persecution and human rights violations, natural disasters are increasingly forcing people to flee. They often seek refuge to urban areas, but the world's biggest cities themselves are also at risk from rising global temperatures. Another effect of the climate change.A record 70.8 million people worldwide have now been forcibly displaced from their homes
— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) September 24, 2019
Why are more people fleeing than ever before? THREAD ⬇️#TheDisplacedhttps://t.co/p4bt0uhEOw