There is no doubt that climate change is a threat to Australia's realistic and time-critical environment. Discussions on climate change shifted from speculative speculation and rejection of political continuity to trafficking and threats of terminal prophecies. Discussions on climate change have matured over the past decade and turned into an internationally meaningable scientific quantifiable argument, but conservative non-believers no longer have dismissal options.
In this article we will explore the main features of this controversy and introduce the lines of discussion on climate change and immigration since the 1980s. We analyze various frameworks and discussions such as securitization of climate change and link to development research and adaptation research. In this article we will also introduce methodological and conceptual issues such as how to imagine the interaction between migration and climate change. Legal aspects have played a decisive role since the beginning of discussion, so various legal relationships, including soft laws and policy-oriented approaches, have been considered here. These methods include voluntary or forced migration and protection of environmental immigration rights
As with many global issues, climate change is considered a threat to international security and cooperation. In theory, this has been securitized and included in traditional security investigations. Climate change and the accompanying environmental deterioration are considered to be threats that may have immense results in the international community. Since many countries are faced with more and more serious challenges, the impact is said to have a greater impact on small island developing countries and Africa. In recent years, the impact of climate change on security has been taken up at the national, regional and multilateral level. In this context, this paper aims to contribute to discussions on climate change and international security, and to provide a broader perspective for discussion. Finally, this paper draws some conclusions, concludes, and presents some policy views and suggestions.
Investigation of the potential impact of climate change on international security: EU - Africa's partnership on climate change
2016 article from climate conference (Australia): So how does food relate to climate change? Let's start with animal farming. In Australia, agricultural emissions account for approximately 13% of the country's total greenhouse gas emissions. This is the fourth highest country in Australia (electricity, fixed energy, after transportation) ... "The cattle's methane emissions are increasing by 11% from the estimate" is the article of Guardian (UK) 2017 . Excerpts: Scientists say that as the obsolete data becomes a new task in the fight against global warming, large amounts of domestic animals rise faster than methane can be expected in the air in more areas.