Climate change During the years the temperature of the earth has risen markedly and human activity is the main cause of this rise. Rising temperature not only warms the earth but also affects the climate of the earth. 1 Since the mid 1800's, the world's temperature has risen sharply. Since 1860, the average temperature rose by 0.6 ± 0.2 ° C (John Sweeney, 2003) and accelerated global warming late in the 20th century.
I have witnessed the catastrophic impact of global warming from arid and semi-arid areas that have been adversely affected by climate change for decades. These areas are so poor that residents will do anything to survive. Here, severe behavior such as logging, logging, jungle fire, charcoal burning occurred. Resources in these areas will be used soon and the risk of drought will be very high. Climate change will have a greater impact on dry areas.
Africa will face great pressure from climate change. Many fragile areas including millions of people may suffer adverse effects of climate change such as the drying and semi-arid mixing system of the Sahel region, the system of the Great Lakes Region of Africa, and East Africa. Southern Africa region and many arid regions. By the 1980s, tens of millions of other people may be in danger of malaria. In South Africa, malaria-prone areas are doubled, and 7.8 million people are at risk of 7.8 million people.
We can see climate change as one of the new challenges faced by Vietnam today, which may become increasingly important. Especially in coastal areas and lowlands, it is one of the countries most susceptible to climate change. Every year about 1 million Vietnamese people are affected by the disaster of the Mekong Delta including the flood. Serious droughts will affect the central coastal area, the Mekong Delta, and the mountains. There are few studies on how men and women cope with climate change, but some ideas in existing literature are noteworthy.