Open Access
Investigating the Effects of Climate Change and Sustainable Development of Iraqi Engineers Ethics
Author(s) -
Yousif H. Abbas,
Ahmed Hasson
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series. materials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1757-899X
pISSN - 1757-8981
DOI - 10.1088/1757-899x/1094/1/012050
Subject(s) - urban heat island , climate change , cynicism , population , geography , urban climate , political science , global warming , product (mathematics) , environmental planning , urban planning , sociology , politics , engineering , civil engineering , meteorology , law , ecology , demography , biology , geometry , mathematics
The impact of heat island is urban in Baghdad, which is a major city colder than the surrounding areas. This study is intended to explain what sectors of the Iraqi society are seen as a concrete challenge to their urban and lifestyle features. Issues about the impacts that climate change and UHI have had on staff were addressed including students and architects, and graduates. The study found that the acceptances of complex issues such as urban heat island as part of climate change and much less recognition of it as the product of human action is moderated in the segments of population of academics, scientists and low among urban residents of Iraqi society. However, low acceptance reflected rather than universal open cynicism a significant degree of confusion among urban citizens. Uncertainty amongst local citizens may be due to theoretical disputes on the causes and potential effects of Urban Heat Island. The findings suggest that scientists are manipulating climate change to follow their own agendas, weakening their faith in research and evidence. This is because of these differences. With just 52 percent of respondents who thought it was easy to comprehend the knowledge presented by climate change and Urban Heat Island, there was a strong need to amend marketing policies in universities and institutes. Results suggest that the Iraqi population’s limited responses to local climate change, current and past extremes of weather warming, water insufficient, and storm seasons support results suggest that Urban Heat Island was not an immediate problem for society. The short to medium term vulnerability Urban Heat Island, defined by their urban climate or lifestyles, was typically not understood or overlooked by a well-educated population.