Permalink: https://www.media.greenpeace.org/archive/Climate-Philippines-and-Cambodia-Drought-Documentation-27MZIFLZFMTV.htmlConceptually similarClimate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP0563Completed★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP0CABCompleted★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP01041Completed★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP01DKJCompleted★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP0YP2Completed★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP0IWVCompleted★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP013IMCompleted★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP0PTUCompleted★★★★Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGP0KY6Completed★★★★View AllGP015YHClimate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationYoung girl holding bottle of drinking water. Due to extreme drought village wells have dried up and the price of drinking water has doubled, Kampong Chnang, Cambodia. Since October 2004,the country's worst drought in 50 years has affected around 700,000 people. Greenpeace links rising global temperatures and climate change to the onset of one of the worst droughts to have struck the Philippines, Thailand, and Cambodia in recent memory. Scientists from NASA recently warned that a weak El Nino combined with increasing greenhouse gas emissions from the use of fossil fuels such as coal could make 2005 the hottest year since global temperature was recorded in the 1800s.Locations:Cambodia-Kampong Chnang-Southeast AsiaDate:13 May, 2005Credit:© Greenpeace / Sataporn ThongmaMaximum size:1365px X 2048pxRestrictions:No FundraisingKeywords:Children-Climate (campaign title)-Climate change impacts-Close ups-Day-Drinking water-Drought-Girls-KWCI (GPI)-Local population-One person-Outdoors-WaterShoot:Climate Philippines and Cambodia Drought DocumentationGreenpeace links rising global temperatures and climate change to the onset of one of the worst droughts to have struck the Philippines, Thailand, and Cambodia in recent memory. Scientists from NASA recently warned that a weak El Nino combined with increasing greenhouse gas emissions from the use of fossil fuels such as coal could make 2005 the hottest year since global temperature was recorded in the 1800s.Related Collections:The Human Face of Climate Change (All Photographers)