In 2010, when this was written we weren't aware of any of the 79 (at last count) positive feedbacks and we hadn't yet reached 400 ppm of CO2 (and 490 ppm equivalent of greenhouse gases) and world temperatures in excess of 1 degree Celcius above baseline.
No
one talks about this any more. I’m in good company in saying human extinction will be sooner.
Humans
will be extinct in 100 years says eminent scientist
23
June, 2010
Eminent
Australian scientist Professor Frank Fenner, who helped to wipe out
smallpox, predicts humans will probably be extinct within 100 years,
because of overpopulation, environmental destruction and climate
change.
Fenner,
who is emeritus professor of microbiology at the Australian National
University (ANU) in Canberra, said homo sapiens will not be able to
survive the population explosion and “unbridled consumption,” and
will become extinct, perhaps within a century, along with many other
species. United Nations official figures from last year estimate the
human population is 6.8 billion, and is predicted to pass seven
billion next year.
Fenner
told The
Australian he
tries not to express his pessimism because people are trying to do
something, but keep putting it off. He said he believes the situation
is irreversible, and it is too late because the effects we have had
on Earth since industrialization (a period now known to scientists
unofficially as the Anthropocene) rivals any effects of ice ages or
comet impacts.
Fenner
said that climate
change is
only at its beginning, but is likely to be the cause of our
extinction. “We’ll undergo the same fate as the people on Easter
Island,” he said. More people means fewer resources, and Fenner
predicts “there will be a lot more wars over food.”
Easter
Island is famous for its massive stone statues. Polynesian people
settled there, in what was then a pristine tropical island, around
the middle of the first millennium AD. The population grew slowly at
first and then exploded. As the population grew the forests were
wiped out and all the tree animals became extinct, both with
devastating consequences. After about 1600 the civilization began to
collapse, and had virtually disappeared by the mid-19th century.
Evolutionary biologist Jared Diamond said the parallels between what
happened on Easter Island and what is occurring today on the planet
as a whole are “chillingly obvious.”
While
many scientists are also pessimistic, others are more optimistic.
Among the latter is a colleague of Professor Fenner, retired
professor Stephen Boyden, who said he still hopes awareness of the
problems will rise and the required revolutionary changes will be
made to achieve ecological sustainability. “While there's a glimmer
of hope, it's worth working to solve the problem. We have the
scientific knowledge to do it but we don't have the political will,”
Boyden said.
Fenner,
95, is the author or co-author of 22 books and 290 scientific papers
and book chapters. His announcement in 1980 to the World Health
Assembly that smallpox had been eradicated is still seen as one of
the World Health Organisation’s greatest achievements. He has also
been heavily involved in controlling Australia’s feral rabbit
population with the myxomatosis virus.
Professor
Fenner has had a lifetime interest in the environment, and from 1973
to 1979 was Director of the Centre for Resource and Environmental
Studies at ANU.
He is currently a visiting fellow at the John Curtin
School of Medical Research at the university, and is a patron of
Sustainable Population Australia. He has won numerous awards
including the ANZAC Peace Prize, the WHO Medal, and the Albert
Einstein World Award of Science. He was awarded an MBE for his work
on control of malaria in New Guinea during the Second World War, in
which Fenner served in the Royal Australian Army Medical Corps.
Professor
Fenner will open the Healthy Climate, Planet and People symposium at
the Australian Academy of Science next week.
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