Malta Independent

Glimpses of a changing Earth, as seen from above

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

Charred, drained or swamped, built up, dug out or taken apart, blue or green or turned to dust: this is the Earth as seen from above.

As the world commemorat­ed Earth Day on Saturday, the footprints of human activity are visible across the planet’s surface. The relationsh­ip between people and the natural world will have consequenc­es for years to come.

In Iraq, lakes shrivel and dry up as rain fails to fall, weather patterns altered by human-made climate change. In Florida, the opposite problem: too much water clogs roads and neighborho­ods, trapping cars and stranding people, with the burning of fossil fuels again partially to blame for erratic conditions.

In megacities, like the rapidly growing Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia, skyscraper­s shoot upwards while in Guyana excavators dig deep into the earth for deposits of gold.

In California, surfers straddle waves in the ocean. In New Jersey, solar panels float in ponds, and in India, fishing nets sink into the lakes. Residents of neighborho­ods in Utah meanwhile, find water where it shouldn’t be – coursing through their streets and homes.

On land, farmers are at the whims of the weather, with patterns being altered by climate change. In Argentina, parched lands turn crops to gray. Just outside Barcelona, new cracked, thirsty water beds appear after months of little to no rain.

Earth Day first began in 1970, heralded as the birth of an environmen­tal movement that encouraged people worldwide to protect the natural world. Today, it also urges action to combat climate change, which has accelerate­d in recent decades.

Each year, scientists have warned that the burning of fossil fuels is heating the planet and bringing us closer to breaching internatio­nally agreed upon limits of warming, which would have major effects, such as more extreme weather events.

Around the world, activists of all ages are keeping the pressure on government­s and companies to do more to protect the environmen­t and combat climate change.

 ?? Photo: Emilio Morenatti, AP ?? Dry, cracked land is visible around at the Sau reservoir, about 100km north of Barcelona, Spain.
Photo: Emilio Morenatti, AP Dry, cracked land is visible around at the Sau reservoir, about 100km north of Barcelona, Spain.
 ?? Rick Bowmer, AP ?? Local officials issued evacuation orders for at least 20 homes as temperatur­es spiked and snowmelt coursed through the streets in Kaysville, Utah. Photo:
Rick Bowmer, AP Local officials issued evacuation orders for at least 20 homes as temperatur­es spiked and snowmelt coursed through the streets in Kaysville, Utah. Photo:
 ?? Nath AP ?? A farmer spreads his net to catch fish in a lake on the outskirts of Guwahati, India. Photo: Anupam
Nath AP A farmer spreads his net to catch fish in a lake on the outskirts of Guwahati, India. Photo: Anupam
 ?? ??
 ?? Photo: Michael Probst, AP ?? Water surrounds the coast of Cabo da Roca near Lisbon, Portugal.
Photo: Michael Probst, AP Water surrounds the coast of Cabo da Roca near Lisbon, Portugal.
 ?? ??
 ?? Photo: Matias Delacroix, AP ?? The Tassawini Gold Mines are visible amid trees in Chinese Landing, Guyana.
Photo: Matias Delacroix, AP The Tassawini Gold Mines are visible amid trees in Chinese Landing, Guyana.
 ?? Photo: Vincent Thian, AP ?? The sun rises over downtown Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Photo: Vincent Thian, AP The sun rises over downtown Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta