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	Hallo eco-aware viewers and welcome to Planet Earth: Our Loving Home. 
Today in the first of a two-part series, we focus on the devastating 
effects of floods on people and our planet. Floods occur when enormous 
amounts of water partially or fully inundate land surfaces through such 
events as excessively heavy rainfalls, cyclones, tsunamis, storm surges, icesheet and glacier melting, and so on.
 
 Experiencing
 a serious flood can be a truly terrifying experience, as conditions are
 ever-changing and uncertain.  Is it safe to drive through a flooded 
street? Can one walk through the high waters and not encounter dangerous
 sharp objects or worse, lose footing and be swept away by the swift 
currents?
 Will people be able to survive the time without access to clean water and food?
 
 In
 its numerous reports, the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on 
Climate Change (IPCC) has observed that around the world there have been
 widespread increases in heavy rainfall events, even in places where the
 total amount of rain received annually has been decreasing.
 
 Prominent
 scientists everywhere point to global warming as the reason for this 
worrisome phenomenon. Climate change researchers have found that animal 
agriculture is overwhelmingly responsible for the warming of our planet.
 
 This harmful activity releases immense quantities of lethal 
greenhouse gases and the industry is also the primary cause of the 
majority of the world’s deforestation and land degradation.
 
 The
 alterations to the planet’s atmosphere and land surfaces from livestock
 raising have wreaked havoc on the natural interactions between 
ecosystems and the hydrological cycle. Climate models cited in 
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports project that 
deleterious human actions such as factory farming which elevate the 
amount of greenhouse gases in the air will mean a continual upward trend
 in the number of violent weather events in many parts of the world, 
including those marked by excessively heavy precipitation.
 
 Rising
 sea levels caused by climate change worsen the effect of storm surges 
and other similar weather extremes in coastal areas by increasing the 
chances that an inundation will occur.
 
 
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