What is going on in the World 2 ?
* * What IS going on in the World 2 ? * *
Irreversible catastrophe
Acidifying oceans
The world's oceans have experienced an overall 26% rise in acidity since the dawn of the industrial age - expected to double by 2050
United Nations Human Development Report 1998
Costing of providing for everyone in the world (US$ billions):
Basic education 6
clean water 9
basic health and nutrition 13
Amount spent on ice cream in Europe 11
Amount spent on military globally 780
Food shortages looming
Oxfam foresees a 20 per cent increase in hunger by 2050; other recent academic studies predict a 35 per cent failure rate of Chinese harvests, a decline in wheat production in India and Pakistan of 20-40 per cent by 2020 (!) and so on.
Torture of children
The UN chief Ban Ki-moon said the Syrian government forces "were responsible for the arrest, arbitrary detention and torture of children for their perceived or actual association with the opposition, and for using children as human shields."
Witnesses have told UN investigators...... some of the treatment children were subjected to included "beatings with metal cables, whips and wooden and metal batons; electric shocks, including to the genitals; the ripping out of fingernails and toenails; sexual violence, including rape or threats of rape; mock executions; cigarette burns; sleep deprivation; solitary confinement; and exposure to the torture of relatives.
The world is depleting groundwater
November 2014 - An alarming satellite-based analysis from NASA finds that the world is depleting groundwater — the water stored underground in soil and aquifers — at an unprecedented rate. “most of the major aquifers ... in the dry parts of the world that rely most heavily on groundwater, are experiencing rapid rates of groundwater depletion.”
Mass Extinction of life on earth
The Sixth Mass Extinction By The Numbers
► Lion populations down 90% in 20 years.
► 50% of Great Barrier Reef gone since 1985
► 50% of all Vertebrate Species may disappear before 2040.
► Big Ocean Fish populations down 90% since 1950.
► Fresh Water Fish populations down 50% since 1987,
► Land Animal populations down 28% since 1970.
► Marine Bird populations down 30% since 1995.
► All Marine Animal populations down 28% since 1970.
► Species extinction is 1000 times faster than normal.
► Human population up to 9 billion by 2050.
This is why ecological cascading extinction collapse will become unstoppable and irreversible in 30-40 years - some say much less.
Violence in cities
While nearly 60,000 people die in wars every year, an estimated 480,000 are killed, mostly by guns, in cities
No feeding the homeless
In the United States, 21 cities have restricted sharing food with homeless people through legislation or community pressure since January 2013,
Suicide rates climbing
On average, one person dies by suicide every 40 seconds somewhere in the world.
GENEVA, June 20 2014
The UN refugee agency reported today on World Refugee Day that the number of refugees, asylum-seekers and internally displaced people worldwide has, for the first time in the post-World War II era, exceeded 50 million people.
Nothing will be left
The United Nations Environment Programme and the World Wildlife Fund for Nature issued a joint report in 2000 that said, 'The World's seas, fresh waters, forests and croplands are being exploited at such a rate that nothing will be left by 2075
Suicide Bomber attacks school
November 11 2014 - At least 47 people, most of them students, have been killed after an explosion ripped through a secondary school in northeast Nigeria, as students gathered for morning assembly before classes began. Police said a suicide bomber disguised in a school uniform carried out the attack.
Methane and mass extinction
A cascade of recent studies concludes that warming Arctic permafrost and ocean floors are on the verge of emitting massive methane eruptions that will quickly load the atmosphere with many times more greenhouse gas than has been produced during the entire Industrial Age. The ensuing warming will so destabilize the climate that a mass extinction may follow that could be the worst in 300 million years — since the so-called“Great Dying” of the Permian Period wiped out 90 per cent of sea life and 70 per cent of land animals.
Washington, DC, 4 December 2013 – The world is already beginning to pass tipping points for abrupt, catastrophic, and irreversible changes to the global climate according to a new 200-page report released yesterday by the US National Academy of Sciences.
Inequality
The 85 richest people are as wealthy as the poorest half of the world.
Death of Plankton
The global population of phytoplankton in the oceans has fallen about 40 percent since 1950. Half of the world's oxygen is produced by phytoplankton, and they are the bottom of the ocean food chain - all ocean life depends on them
Human sperm count falling
Human sperm counts down 50% since 1950.
Bees dying
Bees have been dying at the rate of about 30 % per year for five years — last year in some areas it was well over 50%. Sixty years ago, there were 6 million honeybee colonies in the US. Now there are 2.5 million.
Atrocities by Buddhists
Some 200 Buddhist nationalists set fire to a Muslim school in Meiktila, in central, Myanmar, beating and torching students and even beheading one. By the time the mob's fury was spent, 32 students and four teachers lay dead in the schoolyard.
Irreversible collapse
NASA-funded study warns society is headed for 'irreversible collapse' in coming decades.
Increasing drug use
Across the U.S., heroin abuse among first-time users has increased by nearly 60 percent in the last decade.
Doomed to catastrophe
A new study made possible by the Goddard Space Flight Centre warns that global industrial civilisation is doomed to catastrophe because of the overstretched demand for resources.
Children dying through violence
One child dies a violent death somewhere in the world every five minutes,.... according to a new report released Oct 2014 by UNICEF.
Otters dying
Otters off the northern coast of Scotland are living only one third the lifetimes of otters in mainland Europe, due to exposure of 'normal' household chemicals in the sea. And they are mostly unable to reproduce.
Tobacco firm sues Australian government
The tobacco firm Philip Morris is suing the governments of both Uruguay and Australia for trying to discourage people from smoking
Desertification/Soil loss
Due to drought and desertification each year 12 million hectares of arable land are lost (23 hectares/minute), where 20 million tons of grain could have been grown. This is equivalent to 3 Switzerlands. It effects 168 countries, and according to the UN, some 50 million people may be displaced within the next 10 years as a result of desertification. Today, the pace of degradation is estimated at 30 to 35 times the historical rate.
21,000 children each day
21,000 children around the world die each day The silent killers are poverty, hunger, easily preventable diseases.
Temperatures rising
The amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere reached a record high last year, and atmospheric temperatures have climbed much faster than scientists expected, according to new research published by the U.N.’s agency on meteorology (2014). This year is expected to be the hottest on record. The 10 hottest years on record have all been since 2000.
Religious violence
November 2014: A young Christian couple have been beaten and then burned to death by a mob in a small Pakistani village in Punjab province, after being accused of desecrating the Muslim holy book.
Some Sources:
The US National Academy of Sciences. NASA-funded study The Goddard Space Flight Centre UNICEF. U.N.’s agency on meteorology United Nations Human Development Report Oxfam The UN chief Ban Ki-moon The UN refugee agency The United Nations Environment Programme World Wildlife Fund for Nature
And: The Royal Society, The World Economic Forum UN Food and Agriculture Organization The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change NASA
American Institute of Physics
Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society
Australian Bureau of Meteorology and the CSIRO
British Antarctic Survey
Federation of American Scientists
Federation of Australian Scientific and Technological Societies
Geological Society of America
Geological Society of Australia
Geological Society of London
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Royal Meteorological Society
Royal Society of the UK
The Academies of Science from 80 different countries ..........
etc, all endorse the likely effects of climate change