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Corals are disappearing, pushing Earth to its first major ‘tipping point’. But it's not too late to save what remains.

Corals are disappearing, pushing Earth to its first major ‘tipping point’

(...) a group of 160 scientists from 23 countries announced that the planet has already reached its first major tipping point: the widespread death of warm-water coral reefs. That’s due primarily to rapidly rising marine temperatures — the seas have absorbed 90 percent of the excess heat we’ve created — but also the acidification that comes from more atmospheric CO2 interacting with water. (This interferes with corals’ ability to build the protective skeletons that form the complex structure of a reef.) Since the late 1980s, ocean surface warming has quadrupled. Accordingly, in the last half century, half of the world’s live coral cover has disappeared.

Yes, a tipping point may be a metaphorical cliff, but all is not lost for the world’s corals — if humanity accelerates the translation to clean energy. “The race is on,” Smith said during the press conference, “to transform the entire energetic basis of society within a generation — it’s never been done before — away from fossil fuels and over-exploitation and toward a cleaner, safer future in time to avoid further tipping points and the devastating consequences they will bring.”

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