This stuff is serious. It's real. It's bad.
But -- know what? -- it's not the full picture.
In celebration of Earth Day, a day on which more than 155 countries were signing a landmark U.N. agreement on climate change, here are five reasons Earth is not as doomed as you think.
Know of others? Please share 'em in the comments.
1. 195 countries have agreed to fight pollution
We truly are at a turning point in history. December 2015 is when 195 countries agreed to tackle the Earth's most pressing crisis: climate change. The Paris Agreement, which was negotiated at the COP21 U.N. climate change summit in the wake of the Paris terror attacks, shows that the world is more unified on this issue than on perhaps any other.
2. Solar energy has gotten waaaaay cheaper
If we're going to beat climate change, we have to stop using dirty fuel sources such as coal, oil and natural gas. The clean replacements? Things such as wind and solar. It looks like we're finally entering the solar era -- and that's at least partly because solar power is getting so much cheaper.
3. The world invested twice as much in clean energy last year as in coal and gas
Need more signs we're moving into the post-fossil-fuel era? Look at investments. In 2015, the world invested twice -- twice! -- as much money in clean energy as in dirty coal and natural gas.
Luminaries such as Bill Gates are also gathering billions in funds to work on "moonshot" technologies that could help us meet the climate goals that are outlined in the Paris Agreement. We're likely going to need advanced nuclear technology and possibly carbon-capture technology to halt warming short of 2 degrees. More investment is needed, but there are important signs that we're starting to make these bets on the future.
4. Electric cars are getting popular
5. China finally is starting to clean up its act
The trouble with this: It's fundamentally untrue.
Not only is China pledging to sign and ratify the Paris Agreement, it is experimenting with carbon-pricing systems to reduce pollution and plans a national carbon market that it says will be in place next year. The United States sure hasn't done that. And a five-year plan announced earlier this year says China will do more to cut its pollution than previously thought.
China is the world's biggest annual polluter of the atmosphere.
But it's also home to the world's largest clean-energy market.
It's Earth Day. Might as well see that as a glass half full.
Source → Melting ice sheets, increasing heat: That's not the whole picture