A report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), developed by the United Nations, states that as global warming continues, human civilization is on the verge of collapse. And people are totally responsible for that.


Citing a 42-page report entitled "Summary for Policymakers" released on Monday, the Guardian reports that global temperatures could rise by 1.5 degrees Celsius over the next two decades compared to the pre-industrial era. This means that it may not be possible to meet the standard promised by world leaders at the 2015 climate summit in Paris. And the effect of this increase in temperature will be fatal. At the end of this century, scientists can no longer determine the probability of a two-foot-high [2 m] sea rise. The BBC writes that although it is small, there is a glimmer of hope in this important IPCC report. Scientists say that if greenhouse gases were to be significantly reduced, the balance of rising temperatures could be restored. The IPCC has produced this report over a period of almost 6 years, analyzing research data and studies by hundreds of experts, highlighting the latest realities of global climate change.
According to the report, rapid climate change, rising sea levels, melting glaciers and glaciers in areas of cold, heat, floods and droughts are increasingly due to human activities. Climate change: Where fires are rare, fires are widespread Describing the report as "the highest warning" or "red as code" in humanity, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called for an immediate end to the use of coal and polluting pollutants such as gasoline. The IPCC report was released three months before the UN 'COP-28' World Climate Summit in Glasgow, Scotland, November 1-12. Wealthy countries must be under pressure to implement and support various climate change commitments. "If we can mobilize all our troops, we can avoid climate catastrophe," he said. Today's report however is clear that we no longer have the opportunity to be late or to make excuses. I urge all heads of government and their partners to make COP-28 a success. ” Ed Hawkins, a professor at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom who authored the study, which was used to compile the IPCC report, said that scientists have no alternative. "We just paid attention to it at the time. It's a mystery that people are warming the earth." "Anyone who uses a sports name can say that the universe is dealing with drug abuse, which means that we are seeing more extremes than ever before," said Petrie Talas, secretary general of the World Meteorological Organization. Researchers say that since 1980, global warming has increased over the past 2,000 years Rapid growth than any other 50 years. "This warming has already increased climate and climate in all regions of the world."