Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Climate change and activism through 2019: Powerful images that defined the year in 'climate emergency'

One-horned rhinoceros take shelter on a higher-land in the flood affected area of Kaziranga National Park in the northeastern Indian state of Assam on July 18, 2019. (Photo by Biju BORO / AFP) (Photo credit should read BIJU BORO/AFP via Getty Images)

A pack of one-horned rhinoceroses take shelter on high-ground after the Kaziranga National Park along with the rest of Assam saw extreme flooding. Image: Biju BORO/Getty

US President Donald Trump and EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt make US Paris climate agreement statement in the Rose Garden of the White House June 01, 2017. ( Official Photo by Joyce N. Boghosian)

US President Donald Trump announced that the US will be backing out from the Paris Agreement – a treaty signed by close to 200 nations around the world in 2015 to curb emissions and keep global warming within 1.5 degrees by 2100. He declared that the US will back out of the treaty to media and American dignitaries in the Rose Garden of the White House. Image: Joyce Boghosian/Flickr

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People in Venice sit outside in ankle-deep water because the entire city was flooded due to rising sea levels. Image: Flickr

TOPSHOT - Aerial picture showing smoke from a two-kilometre-long stretch of fire billowing from the Amazon rainforest about 65 km from Porto Velho, in the state of Rondonia, in northern Brazil, on August 23, 2019. - Bolsonaro said Friday he is considering deploying the army to help combat fires raging in the Amazon rainforest, after news about the fires have sparked protests around the world. The latest official figures show 76,720 forest fires were recorded in Brazil so far this year -- the highest number for any year since 2013. More than half are in the Amazon. (Photo by Carl DE SOUZA / AFP) (Photo credit should read CARL DE SOUZA/AFP via Getty Images)

The Amazon rainforest in Brazil was burning in an annual environmental disaster that affects the region's ecology. This year, the numbers increased due to government-sanctioned felling of trees and clearing of forest area to make way for agriculture and for-profit businesses. 2019 was also the year with the highest number of forest fires since 2013. Image: Carl De Souza/Getty

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Iceland's Okjokull is the first glacier recorded in human history that was lost to climate change, earlier this year. These images show the before (left) and after (right) of the area in Iceland where the glacier is located. Image: NASA

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Sixteen young climate activists from around the world have filed lawsuits against five countries — Germany, France, Brazil, Argentina, and Turkey. They accused these countries of not keeping to their obligations to tackle climate change and failing to solve the crisis which they believe constitutes the violation of children’s rights. Image credit: Climate vs Climate

WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 25: Actors Jane Fonda and Ted Danson are arrested during the "Fire Drill Friday" Climate Change Protest on October 25, 2019 in Washington, DC . Protesters demand Immediate Action for a Green New Deal. Clean renewable energy by 2030, and no new exploration or drilling for Fossil Fuels. (Photo by John Lamparski/Getty Images)

Actors Jane Fonda and Ted Danson were among 32 climate change protesters arrested in Washington, DC in which they demanded immediate action for the Green New Deal, clean renewable energy by 2030, and no new exploration or drilling for fossil fuels. Image: John Lamparski/Getty

'You have stolen my dreams and my childhood with your empty words,' were among the many sharp phrases climate activist Greta Thunberg addressed world leaders with at the 2019 UN Climate Action Summit in New York. In her emotionally-charged speech, she accuses those in power of ignoring the science behind the climate crisis, saying, 'we are [at] the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth -– how dare you!' Image: Screengrab from YouTube/UN

TOPSHOT - Passengers walk on waterlogged rail tracks at Ernakulam Junction station in Kochi in the southwestern Indian state of Kerala on October 21, 2019. (Photo by STR / AFP) (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)

Passengers walk on the waterlogged rail tracks of Ernakulam Junction station in Kochi in Kerala on 21 October 2019. Kerala is one of many Indian states and regions that have been badly affected by increasingly-frequent and intense extreme weather events. These disasters are growing in frequency and intensity, as researchers claim, ever since climate change impacts have been experienced and better-understood. Image: STR/AFP

CHENNAI, INDIA - JUNE 29: Residents of housing board complex in Chennai city stand in line and fill water from common tab on June 29, 2019. The locals mentioned they get water every alternate day and for only two hours in the morning. All the four major reservoirs supplying water to Chennai has dried up. The only hope for the city to tide over the water crisis is the water in Veeranam lake and the two desalination plants supplying 200 million litres of day (MLD) water to the city besides the groundwater. (Photo by Atul Loke/Getty Images)

Residents of housing board complex in Chennai stand in line and fill water from common tap in June 2019. The locals say they get municipal water supply for two hours in the morning every alternate day. All four major reservoirs supplying water to Chennai have dried up. The only hope for the city to tide over the water crisis is the water in Veeranam lake, and the 2 desalination plants that supply 200 million litres a day (MLD) of water to the city besides groundwater supply/borewell. Image: Atul Loke/Getty

A Netherlands-based non-governmental organization with a focus on environmental engineering and technology, The Ocean Cleanup, is working on extracting plastic from the oceans. After years of testing, they deployed their first full-scale prototype to rake up the 80,000 metric tons of plastic in the Pacific Ocean Garbage Patch. There are an estimated 1.8 trillion plastic pieces in the patch, which the Ocean Cleanup technology aims to clean up at the rate of 50 percent every 5 years. Image: Screengrab from YouTube/Ocean Cleanup

A Netherlands-based non-governmental organization with a focus on environmental engineering and technology, The Ocean Cleanup, is working on extracting plastic from the oceans. After years of testing, they deployed their first full-scale prototype to rake up the 80,000 metric tons of plastic in the Pacific Ocean Garbage Patch. There are an estimated 1.8 trillion plastic pieces in the patch, which the Ocean Cleanup technology aims to clean up at the rate of 50 percent every 5 years. Image: Screengrab from YouTube/Ocean Cleanup

TOPSHOT - Young ethiopian girls take part in a national tree-planting drive in the capital Addis Ababa, on July 28, 2019. - Ethiopia plans to plant a mind-boggling four billion trees by October 2019, as part of a global movement to restore forests to help fight climate change and protect resources. The country says it has planted nearly three billion trees already since May. (Photo by MICHAEL TEWELDE / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL TEWELDE/AFP via Getty Images)

A group of young Ethiopian girls take part in a national tree-planting drive in the capital Addis Ababa in July 2019. Ethiopia had planned to plant a mind-boggling four billion trees by October 2019 – part of a global movement to restore forests to help fight climate change and protect resources. The country went on to plant an estimated 3.5 billion between June and August. Another 1.5 billion plants were grown, but not planted according to the last official numbers by the Ethiopian government. Image: Michael Teweldw/AFP

A young protester takes part in a rally against climate change in Mumbai on 24 May 2019. Image: Getty

A young protester takes part in a rally against climate change inaction in Mumbai on 24 May 2019. Image: Getty

Refugees and the local host community fish together at a stream formed by intense flooding in Maban, South Sudan in November 2019. Large areas of eastern South Sudan have been affected by heavy rains in the past months, leaving an estimated 4,20,000 people displaced from their homes. Currently, there's no way to tell or track where climate refugees will go, which is an added pressure on a steadily–worsening situation. Image: Getty 

Refugees and the local host community fish together at a stream formed by intense flooding in Maban, South Sudan in November 2019. Large areas of eastern South Sudan have been affected by heavy rains in the past months, leaving an estimated 4,20,000 people displaced from their homes. Currently, there's no way to tell or track where climate refugees will go, which is an added pressure on a steadily–worsening situation. Image: Alex McBride/AFP/Getty

The women pictured are among 20 million people who have been forced to migrate due to extreme weather events fuelled by climate change. Around 80 percent of them are in Asia. Image: Palani Kumar.

The women pictured are among 20 million people world over that have been forced to migrate in recent years due to extreme weather events fuelled by climate change. Of those displaced, 80 percent are in Asia. Image: Palani Kumar.



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