INTRODUCTION With the advent of scientific and technical innovation, humanity has achieved tremendous industrial and economic outcomes. Nonetheless, climate change is characterized by the fact that the earth is being heated by excessive greenhouse gas emissions and is considered one of the most serious but inevitable consequences of human development. Crowley (2000) argues that the latter half of the 20th century will provide further evidence that the greenhouse effect is already higher than the natural fluctuation level of the climate by combining unique temperature rise and restriction of natural variation. system
Current climate disasters and the impact of projected climate change threaten human development (African Development Bank, 2003, 2003). The climate is related to all Millennium Development Goals but is most directly related to the goal of eradicating extreme poverty and hunger, reducing the mortality rate of children, eradicating disease, and ensuring environmental sustainability It is. Agriculture is very sensitive to the climate and is expected to be adversely affected by climate change in most tropical and subtropical regions and is a source of direct or indirect livelihood to about two thirds of the population of developing countries It contributes greatly to national income. About 70% of the world's poor live in rural areas. Managing the impact of climate disasters and climate change in agriculture and rural areas is essential to success.
The threat of nuclear war, climate change is one of the biggest risks human beings face today. Climate scientists agree that humans are the main drivers of climate change and are releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere through fossil fuel consumption, unsustainable agricultural activities, and water pollution . Then, of course, some scientists say the earth is approaching its capacity, which means that the resources of the earth are being consumed faster than they can replenish. Many of this is due to massive excess consumption in the United States. In his bestseller, bestseller's book "The World Without the World" (2007), journalist Alan Weissman told us that the devastating impact of contemporary humans on the environment and how the non-human world will take over if human beings disappear I will explain.