Focus on Arts and Ecology

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Too hot to learn: Cooling Argentina’s overheating schools

Experts hope urban redesign projects can solve a climate crisis in classrooms that left 30 million students in Latin America without teaching last year. 

Last year, heatwaves were the main climate-related factor forcing the closure of schools around the world. Children in Argentina, such as these learning in Buenos Aires, have been hard hit (Image: Lucila Pellettieri / Global Press / Alamy)

Schools were designed at a time when the climate crisis was not a problem,” says Rodrigo Ferreyra, a teacher at a college in the city of Rosario.

Now, in Argentina’s third most populous city, it is a problem. There have been 23 heatwaves in Rosario over the last 15 years, the same number as in the previous five decades, according to data from the National Meteorological Service (SMN). In the city, a heatwave occurs when the minimum temperature exceeds 20.5C and the maximum temperature exceeds 33.4C for three consecutive days. The longest in Rosario’s history was one of the most recent, occurring in March 2023 and lasting 10 consecutive days.

During that one, a school in the city drew global attention after telling pupils to come to school in swimwear to try to stay cool.

In March of this year, classes were interrupted in 20 private schools and 18 public schools due to a four-day heatwave, according to data shared with Dialogue Earth by teachers’ unions.

Argentina is not an outlier in this.

In 2024, heatwaves were the main climate-related factor forcing schools to close around the world, according to UNICEF. In Latin America and the Caribbean, 30 million students suffered significant disruptions to their education as a result of heatwaves, floods, cyclones and severe storms. (See Too hot to learn: Why school heat is a growing problem.)

The heat brings major health risks: dehydration, heatstroke, organ problems, even death. Children are especially susceptible as their smaller bodies find it harder than adults to regulate heat. In schools their lack of agency may make them even more vulnerable as they are not able to move to cooler areas or hydrate when they choose. 

Francisco Chesini, a public health researcher at the National University of Avellaneda (Undav) in Buenos Aires, says the fact more intense and frequent heatwaves are being caused by climate change should drive the discussion in Argentina on what needs to be done in schools during such events.

Pedestrians dealing with the heat in Buenos Aires in January 2022. More intense and frequent heatwaves are being caused by climate change throughout Argentina (Image: Martin Zabala / Imago / Alamy)

High temperatures can cause dehydration, heat cramps, swelling, and dizziness or fainting in children. “If any of these symptoms are not treated, they can trigger what is known as heatstroke, which is a condition that requires immediate hospitalisation because the body’s temperature exceeds normal levels and needs to be controlled,” he explains.

Chesini believes that suspending classes is not an option, as it violates students’ right to education. Better solutions to this problem are varied, he says, and can include short-term fixes such as air conditioning, and medium- and long-term fixes such as setting up protocols to deal with heatwaves and overhauling the designs of school buildings themselves.

The short-term fix

When temperatures are very high, cooling spaces depends on fans or air conditioners. 

“There’s a lot of criticism against using window air conditioning [units] from a sustainability perspective,” says Patricia Fabian, a researcher at Boston University who studies air conditioning in schools in the United States.

Window units can be installed cheaply but can be less efficient to run than central systems that are designed to cool entire buildings.

“They’re not energy efficient, people crank them up, they don’t get taken out of the windows in the winter, and then that creates a bigger energy demand for heating. But the alternative to that is closing schools and kids not being able to attend school, which has enormous implications on learning, on parents working, and childcare, etc.”

In many countries, schools are seeking other solutions due to the purchase and operating costs of AC, combined with an electrical grid that cannot handle demand from these devices and suddenly shuts down. There are ways to reduce dependence on AC: changing the buildings, and changing the cities they exist in. But these are not short-term solutions.

Building better buildings

When thinking about cool architecture, the key is to take advantage of “delay time”, says architect Adolfo Schlieper, who teaches at the Faculty of Architecture of the National University of Rosario (UNR).

Sunlight does not instantly warm classrooms when it hits schools. Heat takes time to move through walls and windows, and the time it takes depends on the materials and their thickness. 

Walls, windows and roofs have “heat reduction coefficients”, which can be modified with adequate thermal insulation, such as glass wool or plastered roofs. Existing walls can be made thicker or high ceilings can be lowered using false ceilings to create an air chamber, says Schlieper, helping maintain desired temperatures. New schools can be built in ways that help mitigate the effects of urban heat.

The architect also cites more innovative and easier-to-install materials and solutions, such as corrugated sheet panels with injected polyurethane. But these are more expensive than conventional materials and clients are often reluctant to use them as they prefer to prioritise financial savings “without taking the global climate crisis into account”, he notes.

There are 437 primary schools and 312 secondary schools in Rosario, according to data from the municipality’s Department of Culture and Education. Applying a standard solution is not advisable, and each case must be reviewed individually, experts say.

Dialogue Earth attempted to contact the Ministry of Education of Santa Fe, the province where Rosario is located, to inquire about initiatives to solve heat problems such as those that occurred in March, but did not receive a response.

Rethinking urban planning

Schools are not isolated from their neighbourhoods. Cooling their surroundings will cool them too, and keep those inside healthier when things heat up. This approach typically relies on “green” and “blue” infrastructure – vegetation such as trees and water bodies such as lakes – to mitigate heat.

In 2007, the Rosario City Council approved a plan to create a “Green Terraces” programme promoting the use of vegetation on city buildings to improve urban air quality. But the programme does not mandate action and has not been widely adopted.

Rosario’s undersecretary for climate change, María del Pilar Bueno, says a pilot project is also in development with residents in the Moreno neighbourhood, a vulnerable area of the city, to incorporate green infrastructure.

“It’s not just about planting trees, but removing concrete and actually creating absorbent surfaces and reducing heat,” she says. “It’s a participatory design that is being developed from scratch.”

There are currently 22 projects in Argentina that have incorporated nature-based solutions, according to research by Natasha Picone and her colleague Valeria Duval. This does not include the recently started Moreno project.

Picone, a geographer and lecturer at the National University of the Center of Buenos Aires Province, stresses that local knowledge is vital and such solutions rarely just change one aspect of a neighbourhood. They can bring biodiversity, and water and food security, benefits as well as cooling, for example.

“It is very important to look at all the possible effects,” Picone says. For example, she says it is important to address what type of vegetation to use to reduce temperature, how it will be used from a social perspective, and how this green infrastructure will be maintained.

Over the last 15 years, there have been 23 heatwaves in Rosario, Argentina. Experts are proposing more trees and blue infrastructure such as ponds and lakes to mitigate heat (Image: Milou / FlickrCC BY-NC-ND)

As a specialist in urban climatology and sustainable development, Picone proposes going further and planning cities with more tree-lined streets and blue infrastructure, such as lakes and ponds. Such major redesigns require a comprehensive approach that also includes school communities. “They can be a focal point for raising awareness among people about these increasingly frequent phenomena,” says Picone.

Rosario currently has a Climate Action Schools Network programme, in which more than 2,000 teachers participate in activities linked to the Local Climate Action Plan (PLAC). This tool developed by the municipality aims to adapt the city to climate change with a plethora of initiatives such as promoting bicycle use, installing micro-hydropower and using school food waste to generate biogas.

Looking to the summer with dread

Planning for continued rising temperatures is taking place across many locations, many of which have not historically struggled with heat, such as Boston, where Fabian works. But across the Americas, as with Rosario, even traditionally hot areas need to think harder about how climate change is altering temperatures.

“Northern Mexico gets very hot, and most of the schools don’t have air conditioning, because the prevailing thought is that in the summer the kids aren’t in school,” says Fabian. “But now that it’s getting hotter, earlier, and more intensely, its actually an issue.”

In the north of Mexico heat is a growing problem in schools such as this one in Oaxaca, as summer temperatures extend beyond the summer break (Image: Jim West / Alamy)

Keeping heat in mind when building and planning in cities means that when cooling is needed, it can be cheaper and more climate friendly.

“If you weatherise a building, you’re adding insulation, you’re air sealing, and it’s easier to cool. It’s more affordable to cool,” says Fabian. “At a neighbourhood level, if you plant trees – and in the city in particular, where you reduce the urban heat island – you then also don’t need quite as much air conditioning.”

These solutions to heat can also bring benefits for linked issues of air quality. Climate change can worsen air quality in multiple ways, including via weather systems that trap pollutants as well as raise heat, and increased wildfires which generate dangerous smoke.

Boston Public Schools has now installed sensors that measure heat and air quality in all 121 of the schools it oversees. These sensors are used to inform decisions about school closures, make temperature adjustments to classrooms, and fix problems with cooling systems.

Efforts on this scale are still unusual on the global stage, but the need to find solutions to heat and air quality in classrooms is rising up the agenda. This month the UN building in New York is hosting an inaugural high-level meeting on indoor air quality and launching a Global Pledge for Healthy Indoor Air.

“Talking about indoor air at the UN elevates the fact that breathing clean air indoors – where most people spend 90% of their time – is a global human right, on the same level as drinking clean water. My hope is that this momentum around indoor air, which started during the Covid pandemic, leads policymakers to support health-based indoor air standards for places where we work, study and live,” says Fabian.

Teaching and learning from climate change

In Argentina, environmental issues must be included in education by law. The Environmental Education Law of 2021 says students must be able “to reflect in order to generate a critical awareness that enables them to think of solutions”, says Ferreyra, the teacher who works in Rosario. 

He teaches climate change at the Municipal School of Gardening, and his attempts to educate students in this topic are now entwined with the disruption of their learning thanks to the surging temperatures and the risks they bring.

“To what extent can the transmission [of knowledge] I want to achieve be detached from this planetary crisis?” asks Ferreyra. “The environmental factor becomes central to the learning process of students. The climate crisis is here with us and the time to act is now.” 

Additional reporting by Katharine Sanderson.

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‘Without solar energy, she might have died’

Microgrids are bringing electricity to those who previously lived in fear of power cuts and heatwaves in Latin America. 

The Energy Independence Square in Adjuntas, Puerto Rico. Behind its creation is the Casa Pueblo organisation, which seeks to democratise energy (Image: José Almodóvar / Casa Pueblo)

In Adjuntas, a town of 18,000 people in west-central Puerto Rico, 82-year-old Olga Hernández used to live in fear of every power cut.

An asthmatic and diabetic, she depended on ice to preserve her life-saving medicines and had to use a diesel generator daily when the regular power went out. The fumes it released sickened her.

“It was no life,” she tells Dialogue Earth.

But for nearly a decade now, a network of solar microgrids – small-scale electrical systems capable of generating and storing energy – has kept homes and businesses running, even during the frequent blackouts experienced in Adjuntas.

“With solar energy, I no longer feel the power cuts,” says Hernández.

Behind this energy autonomy is Casa Pueblo, a community organisation that puts energy in the hands of the people.

Microgrids can operate connected to the main grid, or isolate themselves from it during power outages to supply a hospital, a community, or even a whole city. They can also keep medical equipment running – something that can save lives when temperatures spike in a town like Adjuntas.

Power means life

Power cuts are a depressing fact of life for Puerto Ricans. Residents experienced an average of 73 hours of blackouts in 2024, according to official statistics. Forty three of these were attributed to “major events” such as hurricanes. Not accounting for extreme weather events, the average frequency of energy interruptions has increased since 2021.

Obsolete infrastructure, poor management, and allegations of corruption plague Puerto Rico’s electrical system. In 2017, Hurricane Maria exposed its fragility: nearly 3,000 people died in the largest blackout in the island’s history, many due to interruptions in medical care and life-support treatments.

A house in Puerto Rico with the word ‘HELP’ painted on the roof after Hurricane Maria devastated the island in 2017 (Image: Super Nova Images / Alamy)

In June 2024, a heatwave left more than 340,000 people in the capital San Juan and its surrounding areas without electricity. The temperature exceeded 48C in some areas.

“After Maria, we learned that blackouts kill,” Arturo Massol-Deyá, director of Casa Pueblo, tells Dialogue Earth. “We had no idea how many people depended on electricity to survive.”

Solar panels were first installed through the Casa Pueblo project in 1999. During and after the 2017 hurricane it became an energy oasis, supplying power to dialysis equipment, and oxygen and sleep apnoea machines. Meanwhile, parts of Adjuntas were left without power for six months. After the hurricane, these solar systems evolved into microgrids that have now been operating for nearly a decade.

Since then, the organisation has installed more than 3,000 photovoltaic panels across 400 solar projects, including Adjuntas Pueblo Solar, the country’s first urban microgrid. It supplies pharmacies, barbershops, pizzerias and other businesses. And it keeps Olga Hernández’s medicine cool. When Puerto Rico was hit by Hurricane Fiona in 2022, the power stayed on in Adjuntas for nine days, while other parts of the island were hit by blackouts.

“We’re not talking about energy independence for one house, but for the whole country. Puerto Rico can generate all its energy from the sun,” says Massol-Deyá.

The rise of microgrids

Excessive heat is pushing power grids to their limits across Latin America and the Caribbean, where millions depend on electricity to preserve medicines, operate medical equipment and cope with high temperatures. Drought can impact electricity generation that relies on hydropower. Additionally, demand can spike due to heightened fan and air conditioner usage, overwhelming supplies.

Microgrids have “the potential to save lives”, says the World Bank.

A 2022 handbook published by the World Bank includes estimates that 217,000 microgrids would need to be rolled out by 2030 to displace those systems and appliances generating power from diesel and kerosene. It claims this would provide universal access to clean power – and avoid 1.2 billion tonnes of CO2 emissions by 2030.

These systems are already finding favour in many countries.

According to one analysis, the global microgrid market exceeded USD 44 billion in 2025. North America accounted for the largest share, while Asia Pacific experienced the fastest growth.

In Latin America and the Caribbean, their deployment is still in its infancy. Historically, deployment has been linked to closing energy access gaps in communities beyond the grid, or where it operates only intermittently. There are many such locations in the region, amounting to an estimated 17 million people without electricity access as of 2022. Brazil is leading on deployment, while countries such as Chile and Peru are also interested in utilising the technology to electrify remote areas.

Solar panels in the village of Piyulaga, in the Brazilian Amazon. Brazil is leading on microgrid deployment in the region (Image: Flávia Milhorance / Dialogue Earth)

In HaitiHonduras and other countries, microgrid networks already bring power to communities beyond the grid. The World Bank projects that by 2030, more than six million people in Latin America will be connected via a web of 1,800 microgrids.

When electricity reaches the desert

Southern Peru’s electricity transmission lines have failed to make the journey to Laguna Grande, a fishing village in the Paracas National Reserve.

“It was impossible for electricity to reach us because of the remoteness and because it is a protected area,” Esther Saravia, a fisher and chair of the community’s electrification committee, explains to Dialogue Earth.

Electricity arrived in Laguna Grande during 2016 via a solar and wind microgrid. It was initially financed by The Inter-American Development Bank (BID), then by Peru’s production ministry. This system generates 25-35 kilowatt hours of electricity per day and offers an “operational reliability” of 97%, according to the national government.

Solar panels in Laguna Grande in the Paracas National Reserve in Ica, Peru, where there was no electricity before a solar and wind microgrid (Image: Franco Canziani)

Laguna Grande is a classic example of how microgrids can be more cost effective than extending the grid in developing countries. That is according to Franco Canziani Amico, founder of the company Waira Energía that led the project: “They are the best alternative when the electricity grid does not reach an area, and even when it could reach it, they are often more competitive in providing clean, local energy.”

In Laguna Grande, energy costs USD 0.30 per kilowatt hour, while a generator would cost USD 0.37-0.74, according to Canziani Amico. The microgrid system operates on a pre-paid basis, and that money funds its maintenance.

Although there are no hospitals to keep powered in Laguna Grande, the impact on health has been experienced there, too. Before, without refrigeration, fish would spoil. “We used to bring ice every day,” says Saravia, who now stores food in a freezer. “It has changed our lives.”

Renato Errea represents Partners in Health (SES), an organisation that has installed microgrids in medical centres in the Peruvian Amazon. He stresses to Dialogue Earth that access to energy is crucial for health, especially for children under five and older adults: “Electricity allows food to be refrigerated and prevents diseases such as food poisoning and diarrhoea, as well as mitigating heatwaves.”

Several studies also link microgrids to poverty and inequality reduction, as they offer cheaper and more reliable electricity. This can bring additional health benefits too, as poverty is often a driver of ill health.

Bracing for warming

Global warming is likely to make power problems worse for people who do not have resilient systems to rely on. Heatwaves are predicted to get more frequent, more intense and longer across Latin America.

In Mexico, where electricity coverage exceeds 99% of the population, heatwaves have already pushed the grid to its limits. In 2024 and 2025, multiple states suffered blackouts when energy demand skyrocketed.

“I had never seen a transmission and generation crisis occurring at the same time in Mexico,” Alejandro Solís Tenorio, an expert in renewable energy at the Autonomous University of Guadalajara (UAG), explains to Dialogue Earth.

In such a scenario, microgrids can prevent critical outages.

As Solís Tenorio points out, “hospitals, cold chains and essential services cannot afford to shut down during a heatwave.” For example, in Mexicali in the north of the country, temperatures exceed 50C in summer and there are constant blackouts. So, there are plans to install solar panels on 150,000 homes by 2030, and to create microgrids in isolated communities. Mexicali’s businesses are also pushing for microgrids.

“There are two forces coming together: urgency and opportunity. And that combination can accelerate the deployment of microgrids,” concludes Solís Tenorio.

In Puerto Rico, more than 48,000 people rely on medical equipment that requires power so they can live independently.

One of these so-called “electro-dependents” is 93-year-old Iluminada Vélez, who lives in Adjuntas and needs an oxygen machine to help her breathe. During heatwaves, her family used to fan her with a cardboard box to keep her from suffocating. Now, her equipment runs without interruption thanks to solar power.

As her son-in-law Jaime says, “without solar energy, she might have died.”

This is the second in a pair of articles about microgrid deployment around the world. You can read the first part here.

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In graphs: How extreme heat will affect urban health

Rising temperatures are already impacting millions of city dwellers. What is happening and what might be done about it? 

Soaring temperatures in Kumagaya in July 2023, during one of Japan’s hottest summers on record (Image: Kohei Choji / AP / Alamy)

Every year, around half a million people die from heat-related causes and the health of millions more suffers from heatwaves exacerbated by global warming.

Cities are particularly at risk, as temperatures in urban areas are regularly higher than in the surrounding countryside. This heat does not hit all city dwellers equally though, with some especially vulnerable due to age, poverty and pre-existing health conditions.

Research looking at 38 cities, published last year, suggests that in half of them it could take less than a decade for the cumulative number of heat deaths to exceed annual deaths from Covid-19 during the pandemic.

“We know what is driving it: fossil-fuel-charged, human-induced climate change. And we know it’s going to get worse,” said UN Secretary-General António Guterres in 2024. “Extreme heat is the new abnormal.”

This is what we know about urban heat, how bad it might get, and what can be done.

Cities are getting hotter

One way to measure dangerous heat is the number of days per year when the temperature exceeds 35C. Above this threshold, health impacts manifest with worrying frequency.

In the last three decades, the average number of days above 35C in 43 major global cities has risen 26%, with 1,612 such days occurring in 2024.

This number is likely to increase. Data from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) shows that, at 1.5C of global warming above pre-industrial levels, South Asian cities will experience on average 95 of these very hot days every year. If warming reaches 3C this number will likely increase to 134.

Recorded outdoor air temperatures only tell part of the story.

“With the way we build now, indoor temperatures are much higher,” explains Kurt Shickman, a senior fellow at the Ross Center for Sustainable Cities, part of the World Resources Institute. “People may be experiencing a 32-degree day outside, but they’re living and working and playing and learning in spaces that are far hotter than that.”

Billions will be exposed to extreme heat

Complicating matters is the fact that many cities are growing. The UN predicts that two-thirds of humanity will live in urban areas by 2050. That amounts to 2.5 billion more city dwellers globally, 90% of them in Africa and Asia.

This growth will increase the “urban heat island” effect which makes cities hotter than the countryside that surrounds them due to waste heat from energy use, lack of vegetation and more heat-absorbing surfaces like concrete. A 2019 study found that by 2050, urban expansion could result in average summer daytime and nighttime warming of 0.5C to 0.7C, and up to 3C in some cities. Depending on the location, this extra warming is about half, and sometimes two times, as strong as that predicted to be caused by greenhouse gas emissions.

Even in optimistic future climate scenarios, between 2070 and 2100 more than 3.5 billion people living in cities will be subject to at least one two-week-long heatwave with a daily average temperature of over 42C on the “heat index”. That is, how hot it feels to the human body when both air temperature and humidity are considered.

In the worst-case scenario, this could rise to 5 billion by that same period, with Bangladesh, China, Nigeria, India, Indonesia, the Philippines and Pakistan most affected. In comparison, over the 1950-2009 period, around 1.2 billion urban dwellers are likely to have experienced this level of heat.

Heatwaves will last longer

As well as more heat, city dwellers are also likely to experience heat for longer.

Recent modelling work by the World Resources Institute looking at 996 of the world’s largest cities found their longest heatwave each year could last for an average of 16 days in a 1.5C-warmer world. That jumps to 24 days with 3C of warming.

The researchers behind this study defined a heatwave as three or more consecutive days where temperatures reach or exceed the top 10% of daily high temperatures, determined by data collected over the 40-year period from 1980.



The lengthening effect varies massively by region, with cities in the Middle East and North Africa potentially facing 36-day longest heatwaves in a 3C world, nearly two weeks longer than they are likely to suffer at 1.5C.

More people will die

At a certain point, the human body starts to buckle under extreme heat. The heart and kidneys have to work extra hard to keep your body cool, and they have limits.

Even if temperatures don’t reach life-threatening highs, going for extended periods without cooling down can put cumulative stress on the body.

Most heatwave deaths are indirect. People typically fall to existing illnesses like heart, lung or kidney disease, made worse by the hot weather.

Human-caused climate change is increasing the risks. A recent analysis of 854 European cities found climate change was responsible for two-thirds of heat deaths last summer, totalling nearly 16,500 people. Put another way, three times more people lost their lives than would have done without climate change.

Modelling looking at the same cities by scientists at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine found the expected future rise of heat deaths substantially outnumbers any potential drop in cold deaths from a warmer climate.

Cooling demand will soar

In a world of long, blistering hot summers, demand for ways to keep buildings cool will rocket.

In its recent work looking at the world’s largest cities, the World Resources Institute (WRI) estimates that at 3C of warming, 194 million people could need twice their historical cooling demand. This is quantified using “cooling degree days”, which measures the difference, in degrees celsius, between the daily average and a comfortable temperature. For example, if comfortable is set at 21C, as it was in the WRI study, then a 24C day gives you 3 cooling degree days (1 day x 3 degrees).

The overall additional demand would be greatest in India, whose 189 largest cities combined would have 58,873 more cooling degree days per year.

Improving access to air conditioning will help, but it may not be a feasible or equitable solution in the short term.

As Shickman points out, air conditioners need electricity, and extreme heat often arrives at the same time as other disasters. “After a hurricane or tornado, you may not have the power to run your AC.” The cost of that electricity can also be a barrier to access, leading to what some researchers call “cooling poverty”.

Plus, to build the air conditioning infrastructure at the scale needed will take years, whereas urban heat is an immediate health threat.

“Passive cooling has to be our primary line of approach for every building,” he asserts. “There are some [solutions] that can be applied just about everywhere: albedo modification. That is, cool roofs, changing the colour of roofs, walls, pavements, and shade. Those are really applicable in any context, irrespective of climate and water availability.”

“It’s like a buffet or a smorgasbord. The stuff in the trays is the same for every city, it’s what you put on your plate that’s going to be a little different.”

More city trees are needed

Reintroducing trees and vegetation is one way to cool cities down. Trees naturally lower the air temperature nearby by providing shade and through evapotranspiration, their version of sweating. They can reduce air temperatures around them by up to 8C.

The effect is especially pronounced in tropical, arid and continental climates. Research published in 2024 looked at the cooling effects of urban trees in 110 cities around the globe. In 83% of those with comparable data, the air cooling achieved by planting trees was enough to lower the average temperature during the hottest month to below 26C.

But according to the 2025 Lancet Countdown report on health and climate change, at a global level the density of vegetation in cities has remained largely unchanged in the last decade, growing by just 0.2% on average since 2015.

All these numbers paint a sobering picture of a sweltering future.

Yet, Shickman offers a note of guarded optimism. Life-saving measures such as cool roofs and tree planting “are city transformations that we can make, all with available materials and technologies today”.

“We are not talking about something we need to innovate out of. We know what to do. We have the tools. They are available in large parts of the world,” he reflects. “It’s a matter of doing it.”

Unless otherwise indicated, all the graphs and associated data included in this article have been reproduced with permission from the owners, allowing republishing under Creative Commons.

(Sources: Dialogue Earth)

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