It's Earth Day 2016 today so it's the perfect time to
start thinking about the planet we live on - and how to save it. Every year,
more than one billion people across the world mark the event by showing support
for environmental protection. Festivals, rallies and outdoor events are held in
nearly 200 countries - often, with the support of A-list celebrities and
political leaders. Earth Day aims to encourage people across the world to be
more environmentally friendly every year on April 22.
But why do we
celebrate Earth Day? And how is it observed by people globally?
This might mean
increasing the amount they recycle, volunteering for a local green project or
installing solar panels at their home. The very first event for Earth Day,
which was held in America nearly five decades ago following a devastating oil
spill, is credited as the beginning of the modern environmental movement. Since
its launch, Earth Day has been supported by an array of famous faces, including
Hollywood stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Emma Watson. Now it is coordinated
globally by the non-profit Earth Day Network, which describes it as ‘the
largest secular holiday in the world’. The day has its own flag, which was
created by US peace activist John McConnell and, perhaps unsurprisingly,
features a picture of the world on it. It also has its own anthems – one of
which is performed to the tune of Beethoven’s Ode To Joy, but with lyrics about
protecting the planet. For details of events in your area, visit
www.earthday.org .
As well as all these festivities on April 22, at least
130 countries are set to sign the Paris Agreement on climate change.The
historic agreement, which was adopted by consensus in the French capital in
December, will be deposited at the United Nations in New York in a bid to get
other countries to sign up to it. It will be open for signature for one year
from Earth Day so let’s get signing!
According to the European Commission, the agreement ‘sets
out a global action plan to put the world on track to avoid dangerous climate
change by limiting global warming to well below 2C’. It is scheduled to come
into force in 2020. After the deal was adopted in Paris on December 12, 2015,
former deputy prime minister John Prescott referred to it as ‘an historic
moment for our planet’. Both China and the United States - the world’s top
carbon dioxide emitters – have promised to sign the agreement at the upcoming UN
ceremony on Earth Day. French President Francois Hollande is also due to sign
it. However, signing is only one step in a tortuous UN process for the deal to
come into force. The process requires formal approval by at least 55 nations
representing 55 per cent of man-made greenhouse gas emissions.
Here are six ways
to mark Earth Day yourself:
•Grow your own
food (or buy locally-grown produce)
•Go paperless
•Plant a tree
•Stop drinking
bottled water
•Start carpooling
(or take up cycling)
•Invest in a
solar-powered phone charger
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