We’ve been cutting down forests, trees, plantations to make concrete jungles, roads, a new lifestyle, resources like paper and material things, AND for the major issue right now, to plant crops to feed livestock.
Cutting down trees have resulted in the greenhouse effect which causes global warming. But the thing is that we don’t have any more efficient tools to filter out the greenhouse gasses and reverse the situation.
We know trees are important to us because they provide us with material things needed in our day-to-day life like papers, furniture, fuels, construction materials, sports equipment, and much more. We all are collectively a part of our nature and we all contribute to sustaining life on this planet.
In these years on the pandemic, we have had the opportunity to see how badly nature was affected and how it was going back to normal when humans and their machines stopped.
The pollution levels got down (the Himalayas were visible again 125 miles away for the 1st time in 30 years!), animals and birds could be seen out in open, the air had become much cleaner, water in the rivers became cleaner. It did hit us, didn’t it?
We have seen it with our bare eyes and now it would be strange if we’d turn back to the normality pre-Covid.
Answers & Comments
Verified answer
Answer:
We’ve been cutting down forests, trees, plantations to make concrete jungles, roads, a new lifestyle, resources like paper and material things, AND for the major issue right now, to plant crops to feed livestock.
Cutting down trees have resulted in the greenhouse effect which causes global warming. But the thing is that we don’t have any more efficient tools to filter out the greenhouse gasses and reverse the situation.
We know trees are important to us because they provide us with material things needed in our day-to-day life like papers, furniture, fuels, construction materials, sports equipment, and much more. We all are collectively a part of our nature and we all contribute to sustaining life on this planet.
In these years on the pandemic, we have had the opportunity to see how badly nature was affected and how it was going back to normal when humans and their machines stopped.
The pollution levels got down (the Himalayas were visible again 125 miles away for the 1st time in 30 years!), animals and birds could be seen out in open, the air had become much cleaner, water in the rivers became cleaner. It did hit us, didn’t it?
We have seen it with our bare eyes and now it would be strange if we’d turn back to the normality pre-Covid.
Answer:
my self Ananya
in class 11th
from Odisha