Les Soulèvements de la Terre

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SAO PAULO, Aug 1 (Reuters) - The number of fires in Brazil's Amazon rainforest region surged to a record high for the month of July in almost two decades, government data showed on Thursday, amid a drought in the region fanned by climate change. The Amazon, the world's largest rainforest, plays a vital role in curbing global warming because of the vast amounts of greenhouse gas it absorbs.
Unprecedented wildfires in Canada and parts of Amazonia last year were at least three times more likely due to climate change and contributed to high levels of CO2 emissions from burning globally, according to the first edition of a new systematic annual review.
L’Etat de l’ouest américain est de nouveau en proie à un mégafeu depuis le 24 juillet, qui a déjà calciné plus de 150 000 hectares.
L’incendie est le septième plus important de toute l’histoire de cet Etat de l’Ouest américain. Il a contraint plus de 4 000 personnes à évacuer.
Un incendie incontrôlable dans le nord de la Californie est devenu en trois jours l'un des plus importants jamais enregistrés dans cet État de l'ouest des États-Unis. Le "Park Fire" a déjà dévoré plus de 142.000 hectares, ce qui en fait le septième plus gros incendie de l'histoire de cet État, a déclaré samedi l'agence étatique Cal Fire.
The wildfire destruction to Jasper National Park has reverberated across all of Canada.
« J’étais effrayé », raconte un octogénaire, qui a dû quitter sa maison. Depuis le 5 juillet, de violents incendies touchent l’ouest des États-Unis, en particulier la Californie. Des dizaines de milliers de personnes ont été évacuées. Atlanta (États-Unis), correspondance Une douzaine de maisons détruites, plus de 29 000 personnes évacuées... Aux États-Unis, 1 533 hectares ont été détruits par l’incendie surnommé « Thompson Fire » entre le 2 et le 8 juillet, autour de la ville d’Oroville, dans le nord de la (...)
Blackened trees, dead animals and scorched earth – early wildfires have already devastated Brazil’s Pantanal and local people worry they may lose the battle to save them
Scientists warn of ‘scary’ feedback loop in which fires create more heating, which causes more fires worldwide
La pêche serait la première responsable de la perte de biodiversité marine. Arrêter de manger du poisson serait alors la meilleure solution.
Christopher Lockyear, secretary general of Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), called today on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) to demand an immediate and sustained ceasefire in Gaza. Addressing the Council at its monthly meeting on Gaza, Lockyear also called for the unequivocal protection of medical facilities, staff, and patients. “Meeting after meeting, resolution after resolution, this body has failed to effectively address this conflict,” Lockyear said. “We have watched members of this Council deliberate and delay while civilians die. This death, destruction, and forced displacement are the result of military and political choices that blatantly disregard civilian lives. These choices could have been—and still can be—made very differently.” After more than four months of war, nearly 30,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza amid Israel’s constant bombing and attacks. Approximately 1.7 million people—nearly 75 percent of the population—are estimated to be forcibly displace
If you've ever seen the movie Soylent Green, you know it's not about cannibalism. It's about the banality of social collapse. It's not quick. It's a slow burn. Nobody shows any sense of urgency about anything. Everyone still watches talk shows, even if they have to pedal a bike to generate electricity for their television. Nobody under 50 remembers anything better. Here's the plot twist: It's not that corporations are using people as the main ingredient in everyone's favorite new food. It's
As we mark 100 days until the COP28 UN climate summit, the urgency of addressing the climate crisis has never been more palpable. Global failures to mitigate emissions and adapt to the impacts continue to wreak havoc on the planet, and we’re seeing this in a range of ways. Unprecedented extreme weather events have occurred with frightening regularity in 2023. In March, over 500 people lost their lives when Cyclone Freddy struck Malawi. Last month, flooding in the Philippines caused by Typhoons Doksuri and Khanun displaced more than 300,000 people, and the recent wildfires that ravaged Hawaii – in part exacerbated by climate change – continue to make for distressing headlines. This list is likely to become even longer by the end of the year, when COP28 gets underway in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
Heatwaves, wildfires and floods are just the ‘tip of the iceberg’, leading climate scientists say
Three brush fires burning in rural areas across Riverside county, where 1,000 homes are under evacuation orders
Unearthly skies and unhealthy air resulting from Canadian wildfires may persist for days.
We can’t call these supercharged seasonal infernos our ‘new normal.’ There’s nothing natural about how we changed the Earth’s climate
Carbon dioxide emissions from wildfires, which have been gradually increasing since 2000, spiked drastically to a record high in 2021, according to an international team of researchers led by Earth system scientists at the University of California, Irvine.
Energy prices are rocketing, inflation is soaring and millions are being starved of grain. Surely Johnson knew this would happen?
Après avoir parcouru quelque 6 800 hectares de végétation, le "Oak Fire" continuait, lundi, de se propager à un rythme toujours "très rapide" dans le centre de la Californie, aux États-Unis. L'incendie n'est contenu qu'à hauteur de 10 % et menace quelques milliers d'habitations.


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