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"What is important in climate change is individual action in everyday life."

Professor Arturo Ariño gave a lecture on climate change and highlighted education, information and individual action as the keys to fighting climate change.

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Arturo Ariño, during his lecture on climate change.
PHOTO: Courtesy
17/10/19 12:51 Enrique Cobos

More than 300 people attended the conference "The Science of Climate Change", a session organized by the Science Museum of the University of Navarra and given by Arturo Ariño, professor of the Faculty of Science.

Dr. Ariño used different live scientific experiments to explain the different causes, consequences and trends of climate. During the conference, a historical review of temperature oscillations was made, allusion was made to agriculture and livestock farming as protagonists of these climatic variations, and even some critical reasons for climate control were pointed out, such as volcanic activity, for example. The session also indicated that there is scientific consensus on climate change, that the risk of imminent catastrophe is low - as far as the melting of Arctic ice is concerned - and that more data are needed to obtain better forecasts.

Ariño stressed the importance of the work of each citizen in daily life to provide greater resilience to climate change. "What is important in climate change is individual action in daily life". In this same line Ariño invited to reflect on the consequences that human actions have on the Planet, the importance of changing certain lifestyles, and to convince with arguments those citizens who are not concerned about this global problem.

"There are many daily choices we make in our activity, in what we eat or buy and the attitude we have in general toward life. Yours alone may not count, but 7 billion do," he added.

Another of the conclusions on which Ariño insisted was education and citizen information as tools to stop the partial interests that exist in this "polarized" issue.

"The scientific and humanistic education of people is fundamental. The most important thing to take care of the planet is to study, because this allows us to make more logical decisions and not to be deceived," concluded Ariño.

This conference is part of the lecture series"The Museum Explains" organized by the Science Museum of the University of Navarra on a quarterly basis. The Science Museum aims through these sessions to provide knowledge from the hand of experts to major scientific issues that are in the public opinion.