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Since the US government decided to pass the Inflation Reduction Act, there has been much chaotic discussion on the essential topic of climate change.
Though it's a good step towards protecting the climate yet too little actually to create an impact.
Recent research suggests that the region around the Norwegian archipelago, Svalbard, has been heating four times faster than the global average, which shows that the arctic is warming at much higher rates.
Although U. S. Lawmakers have decided to bring the massive climate law, the question remains: whether the climate would wait steadily for any human action.
Of course not; it is already too late for any actions to commence and function at their fullest; it is the culmination of climate devastation.
And this picture is quite clear from whatever has been happening worldwide for the past few months.
"Last month's heat wave and torrential floods of late in Kentucky and South Korea provide steady evidence of global warming’s intensifying impact on the planet."
This is just one, but there lies many to show the constant decay, the most affected is the Arctic, where some of the shifts are severe.
The "historic moment", a phrase used to refer to the Inflation Reduction Act; would aim at reducing the emissions of greenhouse gases by encouraging the purchase of "electric" vehicles and energy-efficient appliances, and a quickening pace of renewable-energy
installations"
But studies remarks that it is still a minimal amount as compared to the harm that has been happening because of global warming.
There's still no change in whatever has been happening to the climate, and the question remains whether this historic act would bring even the slightest difference.