Will today’s children have space to live? Brazil is the latest country to suffer an unprecedented heatwave. Experts warn that some parts of the world will become uninhabitable.
Red alert as Brazil suffers unbearable heat
Will today's children have space to live? Brazil is the latest country to suffer an unprecedented heatwave. Experts warn that some parts of the world will become uninhabitable.
For the workers in Rio de JaneiroA seaside city in Brazil with a population of 6.7 million., it felt as if they were labouring in hell. "You sweat in the shade and, if you stay in the sun, you melt like an ice lolly," said Geraldo Lima as he loaded a truck.1
On Sunday the temperature reached 42.5C - hot enough to fry an egg on the bonnet of a car. On Tuesday a high level of humidity meant that it felt like 58.5C.2
The current heatwave is partly attributed to El Nino. This occurs at two-to-seven-year intervals and involves a rise in temperature in the Pacific Ocean. But according to a Brazilian climate expert, Karina Bruno Lima: "The main factor truly is anthropogenicEnvironmental change caused by people. global heating."3
Other parts of South America are suffering too. In Paraguay the town of Filadelfia recorded a temperature of 44.4C.
The northern hemisphere has also experienced huge heat this year. The US saw terrible wildfires in Hawaii and California. In Death ValleyA valley in California in the Mojave Desert. It is the hottest place on Earth in the summer. the thermometer reached 52C - as it did in the Xinjiang region of China.
In Europe, there were terrifying wildfires in mainland Greece and on the island of Rhodes. Sicily recorded a temperature of 46.3C. Spain suffered what one expert called a "mega-drought".
A new report4 warns that average global temperatures are likely to reach 1.5 degrees above pre-industrial levels by the mid-2030s. If that happens, parts of the planet will start to become uninhabitable. This will be due to unbearable heat, flooding, sea-level rise and tropical cyclonesA rapidly spinning storm that forms over tropical oceans. .
But there are still things we can do to combat global warming. Pupils studying climate change at City of London School for Girls have launched a petition to make carbon take-out compulsory.
This would mean that companies releasing carbon into the atmosphere would have to take an equal amount out. And that would make a huge difference.
<h5 class="wp-block-heading eplus-wrapper" id="question"><strong>Will today's children have space to live?</strong></h5>
Yes: The new report warns of what could happen if global warming goes above 1.5C. But the technology exists to stop that happening - it is simply a matter of finding the political will.
No: According to the new report, at least 3.3 billion people's daily lives are "highly vulnerable" to climate change, meaning that they may well have to move to safer parts of the planet.
Or... They will, but it might not be on Earth. There is every chance that during the course of this century humans will succeed in establishing colonies on the Moon and Mars.
Rio de Janeiro - A seaside city in Brazil with a population of 6.7 million.
Anthropogenic - Environmental change caused by people.
Death Valley - A valley in California in the Mojave Desert. It is the hottest place on Earth in the summer.
Cyclones - A rapidly spinning storm that forms over tropical oceans.
Red alert as Brazil suffers unbearable heat

Glossary
Rio de Janeiro - A seaside city in Brazil with a population of 6.7 million.
Anthropogenic - Environmental change caused by people.
Death Valley - A valley in California in the Mojave Desert. It is the hottest place on Earth in the summer.
Cyclones - A rapidly spinning storm that forms over tropical oceans.