Can
We Listen Now?
Over 15,000 scientists
hailing from more than 180 countries just issued a dire warning to humanity:
"Time is running
out" to stop business as usual, as threats from rising greenhouse gases to
biodiversity loss are pushing the biosphere to the brink.
The new warning was
published Monday in the international journal BioScience,
and marks an update to the "World Scientists' Warning to Humanity"
issued by nearly 1,700 leading scientists 25 years ago.
The 1992 plea, which
said Earth was on track to be "irretrievably mutilated" baring
"fundamental change," however, was largely unheeded.
"Some people
might be tempted to dismiss this evidence and think we are just being
alarmist," said William Ripple, distinguished professor in the College of
Forestry at Oregon State University, and lead author of the new warning.
"Scientists are in the business of analyzing data and looking at the long-term consequences. Those who signed this second warning aren't just raising a false alarm. They are acknowledging the obvious signs that we are heading down an unsustainable path."
"Scientists are in the business of analyzing data and looking at the long-term consequences. Those who signed this second warning aren't just raising a false alarm. They are acknowledging the obvious signs that we are heading down an unsustainable path."
The new statement—a
"Second Notice" to humanity—does acknowledge that there have been
some positive steps forward, such as the drop in ozone depleters and
advancements in reducing hunger since the 1992 warning.
But, by and large, humanity has done a horrible job of making progress. In fact, key environmental threats that demanded urgent attention a quarter of a century ago are even worse now.
But, by and large, humanity has done a horrible job of making progress. In fact, key environmental threats that demanded urgent attention a quarter of a century ago are even worse now.
Among the
"especially troubling" trends, they write, are rising greenhouse gas
emissions, deforestation, agricultural production, and the sixth mass
extinction event underway.
Taking a numerical
look at how some of the threats have grown since 1992, the scientists note that
there's been a 26.1 percent loss in fresh water available per capita; a 75.3
percent increase in the number of "dead zones"; a 62.1 percent
increase in CO2 emissions per year; and 35.5 percent rise in the human
population.
"By failing to
adequately limit population growth, reassess the role of an economy rooted in
growth, reduce greenhouse gases, incentivize renewable energy, protect habitat,
restore ecosystems, curb pollution, halt defaunation, and constrain invasive
alien species, humanity is not taking the urgent steps needed to safeguard our
imperiled biosphere," they write.
Among the steps that
could be taken to prevent catastrophe are promoting plant-based diets; reducing
wealth inequality, stopping conversions of forests and grasslands; government
interventions to rein in biodiversity loss via poaching and illicit trade; and
"massively adopting renewable energy sources" while phasing out
fossil fuel subsidies.
Taking such actions,
they conclude, are necessary to avert "widespread misery and catastrophic
biodiversity loss."
"Soon it will be
too late to shift course away from our failing trajectory, and time is running
out. "
The goal of the paper,
said Ripple, is to "ignite a wide-spread public debate about the global
environment and climate."