As the probability of extreme climate change is somewhere towards 100 per cent (not 0.01%), I'm not sure how seriously to take this.
It IS being discussed
12
likely causes of the Apocalypse, as seen by scientists
15
February, 2014
Filmmakers,
authors, and media have widely speculated about how human life on
Earth will end. Now scientists have come up with the first serious
assessment, presenting 12 possible causes of the Apocalypse.
Scientists
from Oxford University's Future of Humanity Institute and the Global
Challenges Foundation have compiled the first research on the topic,
drawing a list of
12 possible ways that human civilization might end.
The
idea of the study is not quite new. However, due to its treatment in
popular culture, the possibility of the world’s infinite end
provokes relatively little political or academic interest, making a
serious discussion harder, according to researchers.
“We
were surprised to find that no one else had compiled a list of global
risks with impacts that, for all practical purposes, can be called
infinite,” said
co-author Dennis Pamlin of the Global Challenges Foundation. “We
don’t want to be accused of scaremongering but we want to get
policy makers talking.”
Below
is the list of threats, ranked from least to most probable.
Asteroid
impact
If
an asteroid about five kilometers in size were to collide with our
planet, the main destruction would be from clouds of dust projected
into the upper atmosphere – which would affect climate change and
food supplies, and cause political instability. Larger sized objects
could cause immediate extinction on the planet. Large asteroid
collisions happen about once every 20 million years, the report
says. Probability:
0.00013%
Reuters / NASA
Super-volcano
eruption
A
volcano capable of causing an eruption with an ejecta volume greater
than 1,000 km3 could cause a global catastrophe. The dust projected
into the atmosphere would absorb the Sun’s rays and cause global
freezing. The effects of possible eruptions can be compared to those
of a nuclear war, only without the firestorms. Probability:
0.00003%
The Plosky Tolbachik Volcano erupts on the Kamchatka Peninsula (RIA Novosti / Alexander Sokorenko)
Global
pandemic
A
high impact epidemic is more probable than is widely believed, as all
the features of an extremely devastating disease already exist in
nature, the report says, giving examples of several devastating
illnesses including Ebola, rabies, an infectious cold, and HIV. If
all were combined, “the death
toll would be extreme.” Probability:
0.0001%
Reuters / Baz Ratner
Nuclear
war
The
possibility of a deliberate or accidental nuclear conflict in the
next century or so is estimated at 10%. The larger impact would
depend on whether the conflict would trigger a “nuclear
winter” –
a climatic effect that would plunge temperatures below freezing,
destroy most of the ozone layer, and start firestorms, which would
likely lead to mass starvation and state collapse. Probability:
0.005%
Reuters
Extreme
climate change
The
report warns that climate change could be more extreme than some
estimates suggest. The world's poorest countries could become
completely uninhabitable. Climate change could lead to mass deaths,
famines, social collapse, and mass migration. Probability:
0.01%
AFP Photo / Nelson Almeida
Synthetic
biology
The
most damaging impact from synthetic biology to human civilization
would come from an engineered pathogen targeting humans or a crucial
component of the ecosystem, the report states. Such would emerge from
military or commercial bio-warfare, bio-terrorism, or leaked
pathogens. Probability: 0.01%
Reuters / Eddie Keogh
Nanotechnology
Atomically
precise manufacturing would create smart or extremely resilient
materials, and allow many different groups to manufacture a wide
range of things – including large arsenals of novel weapons, such
as nuclear ones. Probability:
0.01%
RIA Novosti / Alexey Danichev
Unknown
consequences
These
are all the unknowns that could lead to the end of the world,
scientists say, urging for extensive research into the matter. “One
resolution to the Fermi paradox – the apparent absence of alien
life in the galaxy – is that intelligent life destroys itself
before beginning to expand into the galaxy.”Probability:
0.1%
There
are also a few potential causes of the Apocalypse which have not had
a probability assessed to them.
Image from wikipedia.org
Ecological
collapse
In
this scenario, the ecosystem would suffer a drastic change that would
lead to mass extinction. Species extinction is now far faster than
the historic rate, and attempts to quantify a safe ecological
operating space place humanity well outside it. Probability:
N/A
Reuters / Cheryl Ravelo
Global
system collapse
The
world economic and political systems are interconnected, and are
prone to system-wide failures caused by the structure of the network.
Economic collapse is usually accompanied by social chaos, civil
unrest, and a breakdown of law and order. Probability:
N/A
Reuters / Toru HanaiFuture
bad governance
Future
bad governance
A
disaster could be caused by failing to solve major problems; for
example, a failure to alleviate global poverty, or actively causing
worse outcomes – like constructing a global totalitarian
state. Probability: N/A
The U.S. Capitol building (Reuters / Gary Cameron)
And
lastly, the most probable of all the mentioned causes of the
Apocalypse is...
Artificial
Intelligence
The
creation of human-level intelligence can result in the possibility
that this intelligence will be driven to construct a world without
humans. There is also a possibility of artificial intelligence waging
war or creating “whole brain
emulations” that
would give machines human minds.
On
the other hand, the report also says it is probable that such
intelligence could counter other apocalyptic causes presented in the
study. Probability:
0-10%
Reute
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