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Earth's poles are disappearing 2020😱 | ALL EXPLAINED🚀 | JDUY PLANET

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#christmas2020 #JDUYPLANET #meltingice
IF THERE IS ANY TOPIC YOU WANT US TO TALK ABOUT IN OUR NEXT VIDEOS, LET US KNOW IN THE COMMENTS BELOW!
Produced by:
Juan David Utreras
Script:
Emilio Utreras
Alan Hesse
Voice:
Alan Hesse
"JDUY PLANET Christmas Special"
Earth's poles are disappearing 2020😱 | ALL EXPLAINED🚀 | JDUY PLANET
|Inicio|
Hello everyone and welcome back for this special end of year edition. The wonderful Christmas season has reminded us that Santa lives in the north pole, so today we’ll be talking about a big problem that is affecting him too: “the melting of the poles”. Don't forget to LIKE, subscribe and activate the notification bell so you don't miss any future videos. Let's get started!
|Inicio|
One of the main impacts of climate change is the melting of the poles. This affects not only polar ecosystems and oceans, but the entire planet. Over the last 25 years the rate of ice-melt has increased 4 fold, and it continues. There will be severe consequences if this pattern is left unchecked. Some of these have already begun, such as sea level rise, provoking the disappearance of coastal cities. Other effects include human migration and economic instability, serious alterations in the balance of ecosystems, changes in ocean currents and climate patterns, exponential increases in atmospheric temperatures, the massive extinction of species around the world - including that of human beings, disease outbreaks, and others.
The ice at the poles acts as a protective surface that reflects excess heat into space, keeping the planet at a stable temperature. There are 2 types of polar ice: sea ice and glaciers. Sea ice forms and melts over the different seasons and is made up of salt water, but glaciers, which are hundreds if not thousands of years old, are found on land. The most important are found at the poles, and despite coming in contact with the sea, are made up of fresh water.
Why are these ice formations melting? Polar ice has been melting at an increasing rate since the early 1900’s, and this has been caused mainly by human activities, due to an abnormal increase in greenhouse gases that raise the temperature of the atmosphere. A clear example of this pattern is the Arctic: 95% of it’s oldest and thickest ice has already disappeared and it is estimated that within about 20 years it could run out of ice completely during the summers.
It is largely thanks to the existence of the north and south poles that there is life on our planet at all. The poles keep the earth at the exact temperature we need.
Our call to you for this new year is to learn more about this topic. Find out what actions we can all take to make a difference to solve this great problem. Don't forget that we are all in this together, and together we can save our planet.
On behalf of the JDUY Planet team, we want to wish you a Happy New Year full of health and abundance.
IF THERE IS ANY TOPIC YOU WANT US TO TALK ABOUT IN OUR NEXT VIDEOS, LET US KNOW IN THE COMMENTS BELOW!
Produced by:
Juan David Utreras
Script:
Emilio Utreras
Alan Hesse
Voice:
Alan Hesse
"JDUY PLANET Christmas Special"
Earth's poles are disappearing 2020😱 | ALL EXPLAINED🚀 | JDUY PLANET
|Inicio|
Hello everyone and welcome back for this special end of year edition. The wonderful Christmas season has reminded us that Santa lives in the north pole, so today we’ll be talking about a big problem that is affecting him too: “the melting of the poles”. Don't forget to LIKE, subscribe and activate the notification bell so you don't miss any future videos. Let's get started!
|Inicio|
One of the main impacts of climate change is the melting of the poles. This affects not only polar ecosystems and oceans, but the entire planet. Over the last 25 years the rate of ice-melt has increased 4 fold, and it continues. There will be severe consequences if this pattern is left unchecked. Some of these have already begun, such as sea level rise, provoking the disappearance of coastal cities. Other effects include human migration and economic instability, serious alterations in the balance of ecosystems, changes in ocean currents and climate patterns, exponential increases in atmospheric temperatures, the massive extinction of species around the world - including that of human beings, disease outbreaks, and others.
The ice at the poles acts as a protective surface that reflects excess heat into space, keeping the planet at a stable temperature. There are 2 types of polar ice: sea ice and glaciers. Sea ice forms and melts over the different seasons and is made up of salt water, but glaciers, which are hundreds if not thousands of years old, are found on land. The most important are found at the poles, and despite coming in contact with the sea, are made up of fresh water.
Why are these ice formations melting? Polar ice has been melting at an increasing rate since the early 1900’s, and this has been caused mainly by human activities, due to an abnormal increase in greenhouse gases that raise the temperature of the atmosphere. A clear example of this pattern is the Arctic: 95% of it’s oldest and thickest ice has already disappeared and it is estimated that within about 20 years it could run out of ice completely during the summers.
It is largely thanks to the existence of the north and south poles that there is life on our planet at all. The poles keep the earth at the exact temperature we need.
Our call to you for this new year is to learn more about this topic. Find out what actions we can all take to make a difference to solve this great problem. Don't forget that we are all in this together, and together we can save our planet.
On behalf of the JDUY Planet team, we want to wish you a Happy New Year full of health and abundance.