NASA issues its most urgent warning about the future of some provinces in Spain over the next 30 years. Climate change is progressing at an alarming rate and scientists are surprised by the magnitude of the changes observed. We are faced with a situation that requires an immediate response and a radical change of approach if we are to be prepared to face its effects.
Some Spanish provinces could become uninhabitable in the coming years, marking a significant change in the landscape and living conditions. This phenomenon is driven by factors that could radically transform the environment and life as we know it. It is time to recognize the impact of human activities on fundamental systems that, until now, we may not have understood in its full extent. Climate change is intensifying and its possible consequences can be devastating.
NASA’s most urgent warning
THE The Earth is experiencing a series of changes which we see arriving almost without notice. Now will be the time to start thinking about everything that awaits us and the possible consequences we could have. Some changes are fundamental and which you may have never paid attention to until now.
The increase in the temperature of the planet is a reality that could end up being the one that accompanies us in these days that we see coming. These are times of the year when we must prepare for the worst, because the rise in the thermometer here can have consequences across the entire planet.
A few years ago, NASA experts published a report in which they warned about what would happen in 2050. There is less and less time left to reach this date, which could end up following a series predictions that sometimes seem to come true. This alarming study, “Too Hot to Handle: How Climate Change May Make Some Places Too Hot to Live,” warns of some areas of the planet that will be seriously affected by climate change. What is happening right now could be a transformation that we may not be prepared for.
Farewell to living in these provinces of Spain
In around thirty years, certain regions of Spain will be affected by this climate change, leading to an increase in temperatures that could become completely unsustainable. It will be time to get our act together if we want to avoid something as terrible as what the experts say in this report: “Raymond says it’s difficult to predict when we might see humid global temperatures, regularly exceeding 95 degrees Fahrenheit (35 degrees Celsius). degrees Celsius). Indeed, it is a complex process that takes place gradually and develops differently depending on the location. But climate models tell us that some regions risk exceeding these temperatures in the next 30 to 50 years. The most vulnerable areas include South Asia, the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea around 2050; and eastern China, parts of Southeast Asia and Brazil by 2070.
Experts warn: “Past heatwaves offer a glimpse of the future for cities expecting rising temperatures. Today, nearly a third of the world’s population is exposed to life-threatening extreme temperatures for 20 days a year or more. Events such as the 2003 heatwave in Europe, which claimed more than 70,000 lives, will become more frequent and more severe from the 2040s onwards. People already living in hot regions will have to adapt to periods of stifling heat even longer, while those who live there. in colder cities will be exposed to levels of extreme heat to which they are not accustomed. As cities adapt to climate change, they must prepare for temperatures that make it difficult and exhausting for citizens to move outside, make it impossible to work safely outside, and make staying in unbearable inside without air conditioning or ventilation. Cities with little green space are several degrees hotter than their rural surroundings due to the urban heat island effect. This makes urban centers more vulnerable to extreme temperatures that can deteriorate air quality, cause dehydration, heat stroke, cardiovascular complications, kidney disease and death. The very young, the elderly and those with pre-existing health conditions are particularly vulnerable. “Heat impacts also disproportionately affect poorer citizens, who cannot stop working during a heat wave and are more likely to work outdoors or in poorly ventilated factories. » Madrid, the Valencian Community and Andalusia will be the areas most affected by these increasingly frequent heat waves.