According to data compiled by the World Meteorological Organization1, the five-year period from 2014 to 2018 was the top warmest in the global temperature record, with the average global temperature of about 1.04°C above the pre-industrial baseline (1850-1900). Global carbon dioxide(CO2)concentration rose to a record 407.4 parts per million last year, bringing greenhouses gas warming influence on the planet to increase a 43% since 1990. This rates shows not only that human activities are impacting on the climate but especially that the speed with which they create effects on the surrounding environment is becoming out of control. Considering the limit of 1.5°C decided by the Paris Agreement in 2015, at the current level of global industrial development and exploitation of soil resources and energy system, the rise of global warming over the threshold will be stopped just by halving the greenhouses emissions by 2030 and by eliminating them by 2050.