Kilimanjaro and Climate change.
The ice climber has spent his life completing one daring expedition after another in some of the coldest places on earth. ... Earlier in 2020, Gadd climbed Mount Kilimanjaro's now-melting ice cap for possibly the last time. "Some of the ice that I climbed just six years ago, in 2014, it is gone," he told CNN Sport, (CNN, 2020).
From my experience of being here in Kilimanjaro Tanzania, I heard stories the old man used to tell me. He said, "From the previous times, the snow on the mountain was huge and covered the large area from the top to down even closer to the people's settlement."
This means that the world temperature is rising that is why the snow is disappearing slowly year to year.
That is why the Kilimanjaro Project is funding the maintenance and development of Rongai artificial big forest, Tarakea on the Kenya-Tanzania border.
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