Alligators basking off the English coast; a vast Brazilian desert; the mythical lost cities of Saigon, New Orleans, Venice and Mumbai; and 90 per cent of humanity vanished. Welcome to the world warmed by 4 °C. Clearly this is a vision of the future that no one wants, but it might happen. Fearing that the best efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions may fail, or that planetary climate feedback mechanisms will accelerate warming, some scientists and economists are considering not only what this world of the future might be like, but how it could sustain a growing human population. They argue that surviving in the kinds of numbers that exist today, or even more, will be possible, but only if we use our uniquely human ingenuity to cooperate as a species to radically reorganise our world. The good news is that the survival of humankind itself is not at stake: the species could continue if only a couple of hundred individuals remained. But maintaining the current global population of nearly 7 billion, or more, is going to require serious planning. Four degrees may not sound like much – after all, it is less than a typical temperature […]
Sunday, March 29th, 2009
How to Survive the Coming Century
Author: GAIA VINCE
Source: New Scientist (U.K.)
Publication Date: 25-Feb-09
Link: How to Survive the Coming Century
Source: New Scientist (U.K.)
Publication Date: 25-Feb-09
Link: How to Survive the Coming Century
Stephan: To SR readers this will all sound very familiar; it is what I have been publishing and saying for almost a decade now. But it is helpful to have it all in one place, as it were. Perhaps seeing it in one article will finally get through to some as to what we may be facing.
Thanks to James Spottiswoode.