On the front page right now are four images of shrinking ice sheets. Ice is made of water and that water has to go somewhere. Since water like all liquids takes the shape of it's container it is entering the ocean.
Well with islands like the Marshall's averaging only two meters above sea level all that melted ice water, not only from our Poles but the water once consolidated in glaciers at mountain peaks above a certain elevation depending on latitudes, is encroaching on the fragile island ecosystems and displacing both human and other life forms to the ocean.
This is becoming a great concern to those on the islands in the wide open Pacific as they are looking at losing their homes and becoming climate refugees.
The Island Nations will be drawing up a resolution this week in hopes of getting nations that think they are immune to cause and effect to act now to at least mitigate the damage we have caused.
Recent flooding in Australia:
"This is a real issue for us. We're already experiencing some of the impacts of climate change," he said.
"So I think morally and practically we are the ones that need to rise up and say 'something's got to be done', not just in rhetoric and in meetings, but in real terms."
He said the Marshalls, a nation of 55,000 people made up of 29 atolls standing an average two metres above sea level, were on the frontline of climate change.
Areas of the country have been suffering from drought for most of the year, record king tides inundated Majuro in June and rising seas have eroded seawalls and causeways, as well as turning drinking water brackish and causing crops to fail.
Asked when the world needed to act, Muller replied: "It should have been yesterday."
He was optimistic climate change could be contained, but only if immediate action is taken.
"Waiting for another few days, or a year or two, isn't good enough," he said.