What You Need to Know Right Now
Climate change is real, it's happening now, and it's affecting your life in ways you might not realize. If you've felt record-breaking heat, seen unusual weather patterns, or heard about extreme flooding or wildfires in the news, you're witnessing climate change in action.
This page is designed to give you the essential understanding you need—not as a scientist, but as someone living on this planet. By the end, you'll know what's happening, why it matters to you personally, and what the stakes really are.
Earth is warming. Not slowly, and not naturally—it's warming faster than at any point in human history, and we're the reason.
Here's what that means in practical terms:
This isn't speculation. This is measured, documented reality.
Crops depend on stable weather patterns. When those patterns shift—droughts in growing regions, unexpected frosts, flooding during harvest—food production suffers. Prices go up. Availability becomes uncertain.
Water supplies are also affected: droughts dry up reservoirs, while floods contaminate water sources. In some parts of the world, people are already facing water shortages because of climate change.
Heat waves kill. During extreme heat events, people die—especially the elderly, the very young, and those without air conditioning.
Heat also spreads disease: warmer temperatures allow mosquitoes carrying dengue and Zika to survive in new regions. Air quality worsens during heat events and wildfires, triggering asthma and respiratory problems.
Mental health suffers too—anxiety about the future is real, and so is the trauma of losing homes to floods or fires.
Insurance costs are rising because extreme weather events are more frequent and more costly. Property values in flood-prone areas are dropping. Businesses are being disrupted by supply chain problems caused by extreme weather.
Energy costs fluctuate with climate-related demand spikes. If you own a home, farm, or business in a vulnerable area, climate change is already a financial risk.
Some industries are being disrupted (fossil fuels are declining), while new opportunities are emerging (renewable energy, green technology). But the transition is messy, and workers in affected industries face uncertainty.
Communities that depend on fishing, agriculture, or tourism are being hit hard by climate impacts.
If you live near the coast, you're watching sea levels rise. If you live in a wildfire-prone area, fire seasons are getting longer and more intense. If you live in a drought region, water is becoming scarcer. If you live in a flood zone, storms are dumping more rain than ever before. Nowhere is untouched.
Climate change will shape the world your children and grandchildren inherit. Where will they live? What will they eat? What will they do for work? These aren't abstract questions anymore—they're real concerns for real families.
You don't need to understand the detailed science to understand the basics: we're burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, and natural gas) and releasing gases into the atmosphere that trap heat. More heat-trapping gases = warmer planet.
We're also cutting down forests (which absorb CO₂), raising livestock (which releases methane), and manufacturing things that require energy-intensive processes. All of this adds greenhouse gases to the air.
The result: The atmosphere now has significantly more heat-trapping gases than it did 150 years ago. The blanket around Earth got thicker. Heat that used to escape into space now gets trapped. The planet warms.
(If you want to understand the detailed mechanism of how this works—the carbon cycle, CO₂ levels, the physics of greenhouse gases—check out our "What Causes Climate Change" page. This page is about the "what" and the "why it matters." That page is about the "how.")
This is a question people ask a lot, usually because they've heard conflicting information.
The answer is clear: this is us.
Yes, Earth's climate has changed naturally in the past. But those changes happened over thousands of years, not decades. Natural factors (solar cycles, volcanic eruptions, orbital variations) are still present, but they're not causing the current warming.
The timing, the speed, and the cause all point to human activity.
Here's the evidence:
Could natural factors explain the warming? No. Scientists have checked. Natural factors alone don't account for what we're seeing. Add human activity to the equation, and it all makes sense.
Scientists have identified specific temperature thresholds that determine how severe climate impacts will be. The difference between 1.5°C and 2°C of warming translates to vastly different outcomes for the world.
Want to understand why that matters? See our "Why 1.5°C Is Important" page.
This is a fair question. If climate change is this serious, why doesn't it feel urgent?
But here's the thing: just because people aren't freaking out doesn't mean it's not serious. It just means we're not responding at the scale and speed the situation demands.
This page is about understanding the problem. But understanding is only useful if it leads somewhere.
The truth is: individual actions matter, but they're not enough. You can't recycle your way out of climate change. Real solutions require systemic change—energy systems, transportation, agriculture, industry, policy.
That said, here's what you can do:
Climate change is real, it's caused by human activity, and it's affecting your life now. The impacts will get worse if we don't change course, but we still have time to prevent catastrophe if we act decisively.
You don't need to be a scientist to understand this. You just need to pay attention to what's happening around you and understand the basic facts: the planet is warming because we're adding heat-trapping gases to the atmosphere. That has consequences. And those consequences are already here.
That's what you need to know to be an informed person in 2026 and beyond.