Climate
in sentence
7180 examples of Climate in a sentence
When the government sought to prevent the case from being heard, the federal district court of Oregon issued a historic ruling that “the right to a
climate
system capable of sustaining human life is fundamental to a free and ordered society.”
When Juliana v. United States is appealed to the US Supreme Court, as seems inevitable, the question may no longer be whether the preservation of the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights requires “a
climate
system capable of sustaining human life”; it undeniably does.
Even without government support, however, farmers can take modest and cost-effective steps immediately to mitigate
climate
shocks.
Trees are one of the most effective tools we have for fighting
climate
change, and they also make economic sense for small farmers.
With the effects of
climate
change expected to intensify in coming years, Africa’s smallholder farmers must prepare now for a more turbulent future.
Investing in agriculture is the most efficient way to improve food security in Africa, while ensuring that people on the front lines of the fight against
climate
change can maintain thriving economies and sustainable, healthy environments.
New zoonotic diseases are inevitable as humanity pushes into new ecosystems (such as formerly remote forest regions); the food industry creates more conditions for genetic recombination; and
climate
change scrambles natural habitats and species interactions.
In addition to restoring diplomatic relations with Cuba, the Obama administration concluded the nuclear deal with Iran and signed the Paris
climate
agreement.
The solution is clear: we must elect leaders who will take
climate
change seriously.
While Hansen’s warnings came when
climate
science was in its infancy, scientists today have connected the dots among CO2 emissions,
climate
change, and severe weather.
Still, emergency management efforts will struggle to keep pace with the havoc wrought by
climate
change, owing to a dangerous disconnect between knowledge and action, even as the scientific evidence piles up.
Even weather reports on television typically fail to mention
climate
change as an underlying cause of severe meteorological events.
With the international response to
climate
change at a critical juncture, the Trump administration is putting the US economy on a path to higher CO2 emissions by reversing emissions limits for coal-fired power plants, encouraging higher fossil-fuel production, and rolling back support for wind and solar power.
When they go to the polls in November, they must consider the candidates’ policies toward
climate
change.
There can be no doubting that these developments are good for the fight against
climate
change.
Updating them would paint a realistic picture of the costs and impact of our energy production and consumption on the world’s climate, reveal the importance of renewable energy to economic development, and enable better planning of energy infrastructure.
Factors like these explain why international
climate
policies increasingly focus not only on solar power, but on other forms of renewable energy as well.
As a result, instruments that make their adoption more affordable are becoming some of the most important weapons we have in the fight against
climate
change.
Paris is Not the SolutionCOPENHAGEN – President Donald Trump’s withdrawal of the United States from the Paris
climate
agreement leaves the US without a global warming policy.
Former US Vice President Al Gore says that Trump is damaging “humanity’s ability to solve the
climate
crisis.”
Fooling ourselves on these points means failing to address
climate
change effectively.
The UN’s own figures reveal that even in an implausibly optimistic, best-case scenario, the Paris accord would leave 99% of the
climate
problem in place.
Consider the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on
climate
change.
There is nothing new in the politicization of
climate
policy or the over-selling of a political agreement.
Trump richly deserves criticism for abandoning the Paris
climate
agreement without any alternative plan of action.
The revived importance of multilateral security institutions is creating a new
climate
and new prospects for a security system that can meet the needs of the twenty-first century.
Today’s political
climate
is uncertain.
But
climate
change is not.
As multilateral development institutions, we reconfirm our commitment to the Paris
climate
agreement.
Our role is to facilitate the public and private finance that is a vital part of the
climate
solution.
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