Humans Exceeded 7 Of 9 ‘Safe Limits’ For Life On Earth: Study

Source: IANS

Humans have crossed seven of the nine “safe limits” that allow for human life on earth, according to a new study.

In 2009, a team of global scientists had introduced the concept of planetary boundaries, that humans should not cross if they want the earth to remain hospitable to civilisation.

They are: climate change, biosphere integrity, land-system change, freshwater use, biogeochemical flows (nitrogen and phosphorus), ocean acidification, atmospheric aerosol pollution, stratospheric ozone depletion, and release of novel chemicals (including heavy metals, radioactive materials, plastics, and more).

In a new report published in the journal Nature, scientists found that seven of these thresholds, including climate change, biodiversity, land-system change, and biogeochemical flows (nitrogen and phosphorus imbalance), have been crossed.

The study, developed by an international science commission engaging more than 40 researchers from across the globe, showed that humans are taking colossal risks with the future of civilization and everything that lives on Earth.

For example, human activities are altering water flows, excessive amounts of nutrients are released into waterways from fertiliser use, and limited natural areas are left.

The world has already passed the safe and just climate boundary, which is set at 1 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial temperature levels, as tens of millions of people are already harmed by the current level of climate change.

Further, the rising temperatures are melting away large ice-sheets of Greenland, and increasing deforestation in the Amazon forest – all of which are likely to lift oceans by metres, releasing billions of tonnes of carbon dioxide and methane.

“Our results are quite concerning. This means that unless a timely transformation occurs, it is most likely that irreversible tipping points and widespread impacts on human well-being will be unavoidable,” said lead author Prof. Johan Rockstrom, Earth Commission Co-Chair.

“Avoiding that scenario is crucial if we want to secure a safe and just future for current and future generations,” added Rockstrom, who is also Director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany.

The scientists also delivered the first quantification of safe and just Earth system boundaries on a global and local level for several biophysical processes and systems that regulate the state of the Earth system.

“The Earth system is in danger — many tipping elements are about to cross their tipping points,” said co-author Dahe Qin, director of the Chinese Academy of Science’s influential Academic Committee.

The scientists called for setting just targets to prevent significant harm and guarantee access to resources to people and for as well as just transformations to achieve those targets.

Recent Posts

  • Featured

Global Biodiversity Assessment Counters SC’s Clean Chit To Vantara

The CITES Secretariat launched a fact-finding mission to India after multiple countries raised concerns over the scale and legality of…

13 hours ago
  • Featured

Architects Use Comics And Humour To Rethink Sustainable Cities

Architects Anuj Kale and Shreya Khandekar use humour and storytelling through Leewardists and Urbanist Comix to make urban issues relatable.…

19 hours ago
  • Featured

Decoding The Next American Financial Crisis

For much of the last century, financial logic was governed by a simple, foundational rule: equities for growth, representing a…

21 hours ago
  • Featured

Uncertainty Around Future Of Mumbai’s Last Green Lung

The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation’s draft zonal master plan for the Eco-Sensitive Zone of Sanjay Gandhi National Park has raised concerns…

2 days ago
  • Featured

Finger-Lickin’ Food And The Civilising Mission

When the newly elected New York mayor Zohran Mamdani was recently mocked for eating with his hands, it exposed the…

2 days ago
  • Featured

Expectations From COP30, The Global Climate Change Summit

From 10 November, representatives from more than 100 countries are expected to gather in Belém, Brazil, as the Amazon city…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.