Rising temperatures caused by heat, air and oceans will provide great momentum to form large, or even super, typhoons, hurricanes, tsunamis and other disasters. People will continue to suffer and face disaster every year, with the loss of more and more lives and money. The typhoons, tsunamis and other disasters not only directly threaten the destruction of buildings and safety of human life, they will also bring secondary disasters, especially typhoons, hurricanes and other disasters brought on by heavy rainfall, which will cause mudslides, landslides and other serious threats to traffic safety. Rising temperatures are melting icebergs, which are the largest source of fresh water on which we depend for survival. Our underground fresh water reserves are mostly from melting ice water. In the normal temperature equilibrium, the tip of the ice circulatory system, namely melting glaciers in the summer, flow from the mountains into the ground, to accumulate in the fresh water plains. But now global warming makes the glaciers melt very fast, and even some icebergs are no longer accumulating, which cuts off the source of local drinking …show more content…
The temperature change could be changing climate and weather. “In the United States, transportation systems are designed to withstand local weather and climate. “(Karl, 2009). Climate change increases the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events. Specifically, heat waves will likely be more severe, sea level rise could bring storm surges in coastal areas, and storms will be more intense. “In Beijing, the haze will continue, as temperatures rise during the day and the visibility will be slightly better than in the morning. However, due to the structure of the atmosphere remaining relatively stable, the air humidity, fog and haze situation will not significantly improve.” (Yichang, 2013). Visibility is a very important thing to each driver. If the weather brings bad visibility, that will cause road