Astronaut Says View From Above Reveals 'Absolutely Fragile' Planet Earth
"It makes you want to cherish the Earth and protect it, the more you see it from space," says a French astronaut calling for global cooperation to fight the climate crisis.
ANDREA GERMANOS
January 25, 2022
French astronaut Thomas Pesquet says the impacts of the climate emergency are clear from spaceand worsening on his watchand has expressed optimism that the kind of global cooperation that built the International Space Station can also be channeled to protect the planet he calls "an oasis in the cosmos."
Pesquet, a European Space Agency astronaut, made to the remarks in an interview published Monday at CNN.
In November, Pesquet, completed a six-month mission aboard the International Space Station. It was his second tour at the ISS, following an earlier mission in 2016 and 2017.
From space, an astronaut has a unique view of "the fragility of planet Earth," he told the outlet.
There's simply "emptiness," he said, "apart from this blue ball with everything we need to sustain human life, and life in general, which is absolutely fragile."
"It makes you want to cherish the Earth and protect it," he said, "the more you see it from space."
According to Pesquet, the view from space also reveals the impacts of humanity's destruction of nature such as river pollution. But the "most visual visible effect" of the climate crisis, he said, is the retreat of glaciers.
More:
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2022/01/25/astronaut-says-view-above-reveals-absolutely-fragile-planet-earth
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