Huge threat to India's food security..!?

The current measures are not enough to deal with the impact of climate change. The measures currently being taken are not enough to address the impact of climate change. Scientists have warned that if this situation continues, the world will face an irreversible catastrophe. The international Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has released its second report on climate change. The impact of climate change has had a severe impact on humans and the ecosystem. Between 330 and 360 crores, people worldwide are living in a state of extreme vulnerability to climate change. In a few more years the earth's temperature will rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius. So the impact on extreme climate disasters, humans, and ecosystems will increase. Even complete preventive measures to control global temperatures below 1.5 degrees Celsius cannot completely prevent the effects.Speaking during the release of this report, the IPCC hong kong Lee, the group's chairman, said that this report highlights the consequences of not taking action to prevent climate change. The decisive decisions taken today to prevent this problem will determine how people are going to adapt themselves in the future. The report said that various countries in the Asian continent will face severe heat waves and droughts due to rising global temperatures. In particular, the tidal waves that indian cities are likely to face will be sea-level rise, food shortages, economic impacts, and health disorders. Wet-bulb temperatures in lucknow and patna will reach 35 degrees Celsius by the end of this century, while those in Chennai, Mumbai, Bhubaneswar, Indore, and ahmedabad will reach 34 degrees Celsius if the maximum greenhouse gas emissions of RCP 8.5 continue. Thus the report warns that even if a middle-aged young man is in the shadows he cannot survive more than 6 hours. Extreme climatic events such as drought, floods, and heavy rains will have a major impact on agriculture. Thus the food security of the country is questioned.
The number of people affected by water scarcity in india will reach 40 percent by 2050. If the temperature exceeds 1.5 degrees Celsius, floods will increase in India's major rivers, the ganges and the Brahmaputra. Production of food items such as rice, wheat, pulses, and cereals in india will decline by 9 percent by 2050. maize production in South india will decline by 17 percent by 2050. The human race has treated nature as its adversary for centuries. The truth is that only nature can save us. But first, we must protect it.

Find out more: