Research2
Study of Impacts of Global Warming on Climate Change: Rise in Sea Level and Disaster Frequency
•References
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•objectives
The objectives of this research are to contribute to the projection of climate change impacts on human health by refining assessments of the health impacts of heat stress such as heat waves and air pollution, and to present measures for dealing with forthcoming climate change through the construction of a heat-wave ...
It focuses on global governance, with goals ranging from improving living conditions in Africa, to preventing catastrophic climate change, to exacerbating it. It is based around an intricate model of populations, economic production and greenhouse emissions based on real-world data.
•Methodology
The methodology involves using weather models to estimate the impact of expected temperature changes on future rainfall. The weather models generate estimates of the future rainfall. Hydrological modelling is then used to convert future rainfall to future river flows, including peak flow levels.
As one can easily see, large-N statistical analysis is the dominant method in research on climate change and conflict. Around 60% of the studies published in these upper-tier journals on climate–conflict links use this method, and it is the most common method in all years except 2013.
•Results
As a Results,
The changing environment is expected to cause more heat stress, an increase in waterborne diseases, poor air quality, and diseases transmitted by insects and rodents. Extreme weather events can compound many of these health threats.Climate change is a variation of average weather patterns that cause conditions to change, such as the planet becoming colder, warmer, or drier over several decades or longer. Climate change is also the study of global warming and its observable effects on the environment.
Though they often don't get the same recognition as movie stars or politicians, climate scientists play a huge role in safeguarding the future of the planet. They often lead the charge in coming up with new ways to study climate change, explain global warming to the masses, and even curb its effects.