Blutus Mbambi, Green Blogger
My question is,
will a new normal after covid19 offer fresh hopes for the climate crisis and
what will the cities of future look like? The collective imagination of this
generation is failing us
Global climate change is today strike reality, it is
a new normal and is expected to only worse over time, we have been responsible
for the serous phenomenon. In climate science ‘ new normal “ is a well defined
word an average over a 30 years period., which today’s pose the devastation
threat to our own species and other life
time on our planet, with unprecedented heat wave, cold spell, extreme weather
disturbance, According to a new
malti – agency report from
leading science organization of
united in science 2020 it has highlight the increase and irreversible impact on
climate change which affect glacier , ocean , nature , economic and human living condition and it has been felt in water related hazard
like drought , floods and uncontrolled forest fire, food and water shortage.
According to united in science 2020 report the
second in a series, is coordinated by world meteorological organization (WMO)
with the input from the global carbon project
and the IPCC it has present the very latest scientific data and finding
related to climate change as a new normal to inform global policy and actions
and now 2016-2020 is set to be the warmest five- years period on record, this
report shows that many aspect of our lives have been disrupted in 2020, climate
change has continued unabated
Climate change has now reached the tipping point of
a climate crisis and this turn fueling a new normal situation in Zambia, lack
of electricity has always the reality
for Zambia, in most of rural areas
accessing to power falls 3%,however urban areas are now being affected by load
shedding, households that are connected to the grid, are suffering too much,
not only is it having severe impact on agricultural and increase in food price,
it has led to electricity black out across the
nation as rain fails, water
levels in the dam have fallen to record level such as power is now scaring,
and is being rationed with a programme of ‘load shedding’. Load shedding
planned power outages is set up to save electricity, and it provides people in
urban areas with a timetable as to when there will be power in their
neighbourhood.
(Lusaka), the capital city, we
currently going through 12 hour long days without electricity in our homes.
This is affecting our homes, as well as many businesses, leading to people
looking for alternative methods to electricity.
Forest
disturbance, like deforestation rates in Zambia
increasing at the arming rate, as
trees are being cut down to produce charcoal, which in turn contributes to
household air pollution and up to 10,000 premature deaths per year , forest
fire and two factor characterized this new normal, the geographical expansion
of the forest and forest are vital for a climate neutral but addressing the
increasing problem of forest disturbance is crucial not only in term of
forestry or civil protection constriction but mitigate climate change In addition
of climate crisis, we cannot take African carbon sink for granted, we need new
strategies investment and incentives for sustainable forest management to
continue maintain the sink in the future
In eastern and central parts of Zambia, floods caused by heavy rains have
washed away houses, bridges and roads in February this year, leaving families
homeless and entire regions devastated and in
Muchinga province, four people died while trying to cross the flooded
Luangwa River. In Lusaka province, many roads and bridges collapsed under the
weight of floods.
In other parts of the country, droughts are laying fields to waste and
causing food shortages. Some southern and western provinces urgently need food
aid.One of the regions hardest hit by drought is the Nalolo district in the
west, home of Vice President Inonge Wina. “It is very unfortunate that
even though our vice president comes from this area, little is being done to
address the impacts of climate change here,” says Teddy Ilukena, a local
farmer.
According to the 2019-2020 United Nations Humanitarian Response Plan
(HRP) for Zambia, 2.3 million Zambians will need food aid before the next
harvest. It says 450,000 of those people need food immediately.
“My administration is doing everything possible to rehabilitate and
resettle the affected people,” Lungu said. He noted the rains are a “double
edged sword”, causing devastation for some districts but also watering crops
elsewhere and filling dams that can be used for hydropower.
I do not agree that international aid is the right answer, the government
should find home-grown solutions instead of requesting aid every time floods
hit. “Over 50 years after independence, we should use our own resources to
respond to climate change challenges,” he says. The Jesuit Centre for
Theological Reflection (JCTR), a Roman Catholic organization, agrees that local
input would be helpful, and argues that government’s disaster management and
mitigation unit should fund research to find solutions for a chronic flood
problem.
Proposed Signs Of Hopes From Science To Combat
Climate Change.
Investments in research for development by the
African center for agriculture research (ACIAR) are reducing farmers risk and
increasing the yield of maize and legume by three and four times, by promoting
conservation agriculture practice that can simultaneously reduce land
degradation and labor cost, improve soil fertility and increase farmer’s
capacity to adapt to climate viability and change
They are busy saying, they are addressing us on the
carbon emission cut but change required action are still nowhere in site and I still
believe that the biggest danger is not inaction, the real danger is when
politician and governments are making it looks like real action is happing when
in fact almost nothing is being done apart from cleaver accounting creative.
About the Author:
Blutus Mbambi is doing his bachelors of science in Environmental
Management System at Information And Communications University, Zambia. He is a
climate activist who work for his community and plays a part to make a difference
globally.
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