World

Climate Warnings – 'Possibility for Corrective Actions Running Out'

The Earth's climate is changing so fast that humanity is running out of options to take corrective action, warns leading scientist Jane Goodall.

Goodall, a world-renowned environmentalist, anthropologist and activist for many decades, said time is running out fast to halt the worst effects of human-caused global warming.

"We are literally approaching a point of no return," the scientist told AFP.

“Look around the world at what is happening with climate change. It's scary. We are part of the natural world and depend on healthy ecosystems," he said.

Goodall is best known for her groundbreaking six-decade study of chimpanzees in Tanzania, which identified "human-like" behavior among the animals, including a propensity for war, as well as the ability to display emotions.

Now 88, the British scientist is also an author and her books have been the subject of films. She has also been transformed into a Lego figure and a Barbie doll.

Goodall said her own environmental awakening came in the 1980s while working in Mongolia, where she realized the hillsides were being stripped bare.

"The reason people cut down trees was to have more land, to grow food as their families grew and also to make money from charcoal or timber," he said.

"So if we don't help these people find ways to live without destroying their environment, we can't save chimpanzees or forests or anything else," he said.

Goodall says she has seen some changes for the better in recent decades, but called for faster action.

He said we know what we need to do and we have the tools, "but we're dealing with the short-term position of financial gain versus the long-term protection of the environment for the future."

"I don't pretend that I can solve the problems that the crisis creates because there are big problems. And yet, if we look at the alternative, which continues to destroy the environment, we are doomed," he said.

Goodall spoke last Sunday on the sidelines of an event for the Templeton Prize, an annual award given to individuals whose work uses science to explore questions facing humanity.

The prize money went to the Jane Goodall Institute, a global wildlife and environmental organization that runs youth programs in 66 countries.

Source: KYPE

News stream

SOTIRA: Bright Tuesday with traditional games and music (PICTURES)

The Sotiras Catechetical Congregations and the Sotiras Youth Center aiming to keep alive…

May 7, 2024

Brazil: Woman who took dead uncle to bank to sign loan breaks her silence

Érika de Souza Vieira Nunes from Brazil shocked the local community and not…

May 7, 2024

Out-of-court traffic complaints reached 503 on Easter

The members of the Cypriot Traffic Police from Maundy Thursday until yesterday Monday, carried out 503...

May 7, 2024

Eurovision 2024: Tonight the XNUMXst Semi-Final with Cyprus – The order of appearance of the countries

The "heart" of the 68th Eurovision Song Contest "beats" tonight in Malmö, Sweden and...

May 7, 2024

PARALIMNI: With Traditional ice-skating and music-dance event "The Saint George's Festival" (PICTURES)

It was held with great success on the evening of Easter Monday, May 6, 2024 in the square...

May 7, 2024

Hotel occupancy rates are lower than last summer

Occupancies of Cyprus hotels are expected to be lower than in 2023 in the summer of 2024...

May 7, 2024