Flood risks and societal damages are projected to TS increase with every increment of global warming (medium confidence).
Climate trends and extreme events have had major impacts on many natural systems (high confidence). For example, periodic droughts in parts of the Amazon since the 1990s, partly attributed to climate change, resulted in high tree mortality rates and basin-wide reductions in forest productivity, momentarily turning Amazon forests from a carbon sink into a net carbon source (high confidence).
Observed mortality from floods, drought and storms is 15 times higher for countries ranked as highly vulnerable compared to less vulnerable countries in the last decade (high confidence).
Increasing temperatures and heatwaves have increased mortality and morbidity (very high confidence), with impacts that vary by age, gender, urbanisation and socioeconomic factors (very high confidence).
https://t.center/NatureFreaksFacts/618
https://t.center/LetzteGenerationTelegram/104
https://t.center/NaturFacts/185
Climate change increases risks of violent conflict, primarily intrastate conflicts, by strengthening climate-sensitive drivers (medium confidence).
Climate-induced changes in the hydrological cycle have negatively impacted freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems.
Hydrological cycle changes have impacted food and energy production and increased the incidence of water-borne diseases.
Glaciers are melting at unprecedented rates, causing negative societal impacts among communities that depend on cryospheric water resources (high confidence).
https://t.center/MissionArctic/79
https://t.center/MissionArctic/90
Water-related risks are projected to increase at all warming levels, with risks being proportionally lower at 1.5°C than at higher degrees of warming (high confidence).
https://t.center/EnergyFactsTelegram/980
Consequences of a warming ocean
https://t.center/NatureFreaksFacts/823
More
https://t.center/MissionPlaneta/96