Though diminishing, there are still those who deny that climate change, at least as being the result of human activity, is occurring and are dismissive of man's efforts to combat it. Or it could be regarded as a lost cause, so why worry?
Whatever, the frequency of extreme weather patterns around the world must surely cause alarm and portend declining habitability of the planet for human and other life. I have no doubt this obligates us to strive for a planet able to allow succeeding generations to live as we have lived. Yes, we have much to worry about – and much to be thankful for too - but deteriorating climate overshadows all our challenges.
Life on this planet has evolved over hundreds of millions of years. Until recently it was relatively stable, with the exception of traumatic extraterrestrial events, allowing ecological evolvement to subtly shift to meet changing conditions, most likely natural climate change, something that has been a constant but slow process, quite unlike that of today.
The first act of man to destabilise the climate was to destroy the planet's lungs – the natural forests that clothed most of the landmass. This had its origins with the Neolithic Revolution (also known as the Agricultural Revolution), beginning about 12,000 years ago in the Middle East region of the Fertile Crescent. This marked a historic transformation of civilisation's structure, indicated by the decline of the small, nomadic groups of hunter-gatherers that characterised society.
Thenceforth, people took up farming, and as productivity increased beyond what was needed to feed the family, excess was sold, hence the birth of agricultural trade. Thus, villages grew into ever-enlarging cities as productivity increased through genetic improvement and aided by irrigation and fertiliser and, in recent times, mechanisation and the use of agricultural chemicals. The forests were in the way of the would-be farmer and the destruction began.