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201517Jan20:07

Impact human activ­ity reaches planetary-​scale pro­por­tions, a threat to human wellbeing

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pub­lished 17 Jan­u­ary 2015 | mod­i­fied 17 Jan­u­ary 2015
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The accel­er­ated impacts of human activ­ity on the Earth over the past 60 years have reached “planetary-​scale” pro­por­tions, in turn dri­ving the earth into a new geo­log­i­cal age, new research says.

Planet earth by NASAAn inter­na­tional team of researchers found that of nine global-​scale processes which under­pin life on earth, four have exceeded safe con­di­tions, with two impacted so sig­nif­i­cantly as to pose seri­ous risks to future human wellbeing.

Human activ­i­ties could drive the earth into a much less hos­pitable state — in this research we have more accu­rately assessed the risk of this hap­pen­ing,” said Pro­fes­sor Will Steffen.

We are start­ing to desta­bi­lize our own plan­e­tary life sup­port system.
Pro­fes­sor Will Stef­fen, lead researcher, the Aus­tralian National Uni­ver­sity and the Stock­holm Resilience Centre »

The first paper charts the “Great Accel­er­a­tion” in human activ­ity since 1750 using a plan­e­tary dash­board of 24 global indi­ca­tors. It is pub­lished online before print on 16 Jan­u­ary in the new jour­nal Anthro­pocene Review.

We expected to see major changes since 1750, but what sur­prised us was the tim­ing; dra­matic increases have occurred since 1950,” Pro­fes­sor Stef­fen said. The research team com­pared 12 mea­sures of human activ­ity (such as eco­nomic growth, pop­u­la­tion, energy use) with 12 envi­ron­men­tal fac­tors, such as bio­di­ver­sity, and the car­bon and nitro­gen cycles, and found they had all seen unprece­dented growth in the lat­ter half of the 20th Century.

Call of life — trailer

(Source: Pangeal­ity Pro­duc­tions on Vimeo)

For exam­ple, since 1950 urban pop­u­la­tion has increased seven-​fold, pri­mary energy use has quin­tu­pled and fer­til­izer use has increased eight-​fold. In turn species are becom­ing extinct more than 100 times faster than the back­ground rate, and the amount of nitro­gen enter­ing the oceans has quadrupled.

We’ve now entered a new geo­log­i­cal epoch, named the Anthro­pocene, in which the global eco­nomic sys­tem is the pri­mary dri­ver of change on Earth,” Pro­fes­sor Stef­fen said. “We have become a planetary-​scale force in a sin­gle lifetime.”

The accel­er­ated impacts of human activ­ity on the Earth over the past 60 years have reached “planetary-​scale” pro­por­tions, in turn dri­ving the earth into a new geo­log­i­cal age:

The sec­ond paper, pub­lished online on 15 Jan­u­ary in the jour­nal Sci­ence Express, quan­ti­fies risks to nine global sys­tems that reg­u­late the sta­bil­ity of the Earth and pro­vide “ecosys­tem ser­vices” that soci­eties depend upon, such as main­tain­ing fresh water sup­plies, soil fer­til­ity and cli­matic stability.

The inter­na­tional team of 18 researchers say that four of the nine sys­tems have already crossed plan­e­tary bound­aries into risky ter­ri­tory.

The four are:
» cli­mate change caused by car­bon emis­sions;
» loss of bios­phere integrity, result­ing from high rates of species extinc­tion;
» land sys­tem change;
» altered bio­geo­chem­i­cal cycles — high lev­els of phos­pho­rus and nitro­gen flow­ing into the oceans fol­low­ing overuse of fer­tilis­ers.

The team found that cli­mate change and loss of bios­phere integrity are core plan­e­tary bound­aries which, once crossed, risk shift­ing the Earth to a new state.

For cli­mate change the risk to humans begins increas­ing as car­bon diox­ide rises above 350 parts per mil­lion (ppm). We’re now at nearly 400 ppm; we’re cop­ing so far, but we’re see­ing extreme weather events become worse, loss of polar ice and other wor­ry­ing impacts,” Pro­fes­sor Stef­fen said. “Our analy­sis shows that at 450 ppm the risks are very seri­ous indeed.”

Pro­fes­sor Stef­fen says liv­ing within plan­e­tary bound­aries will not nec­es­sar­ily com­pro­mise the pros­per­ity and com­fort of humans. “Experts from tech­nol­ogy and engi­neer­ing say we can pros­per with nine bil­lion peo­ple, and stay within the plan­e­tary bound­aries,” Pro­fes­sor Stef­fen said. “We have to be clever and we have to inno­vate, but they say we can do it.”

The team will present their find­ings in seven sem­i­nars at the World Eco­nomic Forum in Davos, which runs from 21 to 25 January.



(Source: Aus­tralian National Uni­ver­sity media release, 16.01.2015)


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