Climate change is already having a huge impact on Earth's oceans. Most things we do, including using electricity, driving a car, and flying in planes emits carbon dioxide. Oceans thanklessly take in roughly 25% of the carbon dioxide we emit, which leads to ocean acidification. This disrupts the growth of organisms like oysters and corals, which support entire ecosystems.
What's more, oceans absorb 93% of the excess heat that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide trap on the planet. As a result, oceans are warming about 40% faster than experts previously thought. This can harm marine life, kill coral, and cause flooding.
Of course, it's hard to stop driving, flying, or powering your home. But being aware of how it impacts the environment is important nonetheless.
"At some level, we need to just try to consume fewer resources," Simone Alin, a researcher at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, told Business Insider. "We have rapacious appetites for things and experiences, and our ideas that perpetual growth, travel, and novelty are potentially sustainable are not realistic from an environmental perspective."