William Ripple of Oregon State University's College of Forestry, who started the campaign, said that he came across the 1992 warning last February, and noticed that this year happened to mark the 25th anniversary. Together with his graduate student, Christopher Wolf, he decided to revisit the concerns raised then, and collect global data for different variables to show trends over the past 25 years. Ripple found:
A decline in freshwater availability;
Unsustainable marine fisheries;
Ocean dead zones;
Forest losses;
Dwindling biodiversity;
Climate change;
Population growth.
There was one positive outcome, however: a rapid decline in ozone depletion. One of the potential solutions is to stabilize the population. If we reduce family size, consumption patterns don't rise as much. And that can be done by empowering girls and women, providing sexual education and education on family planning.
1 comment:
"And that [stabilize the population] can be done by empowering girls and women, providing sexual education and education on family planning."
...which is another way of saying 'quit screwing so much'.
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