The Day After Tomorrow

Monday, 18 July 2016 - 5:00pm to 6:00pm
What impact will Climate Change have on the
current extreme shifts in global weather patterns?
 
"This is the second year of extreme heat in southeast Asia...all this was predicted by recent studies. The same studies say it will get even hotter, for longer periods, as the decades progress."
 
"...the poorest victims of this heat are the least responsible for global warming. The source of the pollution has been half a world away, where most of us live in fossil-powered luxury. But in a world connected by finance, trade, and airplanes, the blowback can travel back from half a world – from the steaming countries of India and Pakistan."
 
Professors David Karoly and Will Steffen describe what scientists expect over the next decades as we fail to decrease carbon emissions.

Dr Adil Najam, Pakistani expert on International Affairs takes us to Karachi’s most punishing heat waves and the climate refugees that are flocking away from unlivable conditions.

Monday 5:00pm to 6:00pm
Climate change - what's hot and what's not. Find out what is happening in community campaigns around the country, as well as the latest science and the solutions that are available now.

Presenter

Climate Action Collective

Topic