Metadata
Title
What has climate change got to do with me?
Category
general
UUID
b9feb360f6fb44ff9ccb97b75ad208e3
Source URL
https://isa.sydney.edu.au/education-and-training-isa/what-has-climate-change-got...
Parent URL
https://isa.sydney.edu.au/
Crawl Time
2026-03-10T04:07:06+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

What has climate change got to do with me?

Source: https://isa.sydney.edu.au/education-and-training-isa/what-has-climate-change-got-to-do-with-me/ Parent: https://isa.sydney.edu.au/

Scientists and politicians agree that humans are slowly changing the earth’s climate. This is happening because of the emission of greenhouse gases (mainly carbon dioxide and methane) into the atmosphere, causing global warming (about 3⁰C+ over the next 100 years) and a worldwide rise in sea level.

Climate change means that millions of people living on low-lying islands and in coastal regions will be displaced, water and food supply will deteriorate, floods and droughts will be more frequent and extreme, and some infectious diseases such as malaria and yellow fever will thrive in the changing conditions.

In order to keep climate change at bay, emissions have to be reduced. Scientists say that annual emissions of 3.5 tonnes per person worldwide is a level that will stabilise the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. About three quarters of the world’s population emit less than 3.5 t per year. These are people living in developing countries like India. The average Australian emits about 25 t per year. This emission rate is far above that of developing countries and will need to be considerably reduced to avert the threat of climate change.

Fortunately there are many ways to assist in the reduction of Australia’s emissions. The personal greenhouse gas budget on the first worksheet can help to find the areas where you can start reducing your greenhouse gas emissions most effectively. Here are some ideas that can make a difference: